Experimenter Effects in Behavioral Research: Enlarged Edition, 1976 (; backlinks; similar):
Within the context of a general discussion of the unintended effects of scientists on the results of their research, this work reported on the growing evidence that the hypothesis of the behavioral scientist could come to serve as a self-fulfilling prophecy, by means of subtle processes of communication between the experimenter and the human or animal research subject.
The Science Citation Index (SCI) and the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) indicate that the book has been cited over 740× since 1966 [as of 1979].
[Enlarged Edition, expanded with discussion of the Pygmalion effect etc: ISBN 0–470-01391-5]