Ullman received his Bachelor of Science degree from the
College of the City of New York in 1935 and graduated from the
New York University School of Medicine in 1938. Ullman completed training in
neurology and
psychiatry and, after returning from military service, entered private practice in 1946. He completed his psychoanalytic training at the
New York Medical College and served on the psychoanalytic faculty of that institution for 12 years, beginning in 1950. In the 1960s he pursued
psychosomatic research in
dermatology at the Skin and Cancer Unit of
Bellevue Hospital and was associated with the Bellevue
Stroke Study for four years. In 1961 he also founded one of the first sleep laboratories in
New York City at the Maimonides Medical Center, devoted to the experimental study of dreams and telepathy. Ullman resigned from Maimonides in 1974 and, since then, was engaged in work on dreams and dreaming. He was in the forefront of the movement to stimulate public interest in dreams and to encourage the development of dream sharing groups. Working in a small group setting that he believed to be both safe and effective, Ullman spent the last three decades of his life leading such groups both in the United States and overseas. Ullman was also Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus at
Albert Einstein College of Medicine and was a president of both the
Parapsychological Association and of the
American Society for Psychical Research. He served on the Council of Advisors for the
Dream Network Journal from 1990 to 1994, and was honoured with a special edition of the journal in 2006 "A Tribute to Monte Ullman". ==Reception==