Heather Williams (biologist)
Heather Williams (born 1955 in Spokane, Washington) is an American ornithologist, and professor at Williams College.[1][2]
She graduated from Bowdoin College with an A.B. in Biology in 1977, from Rockefeller University with a Ph.D. in Neuroscience in 1985, and was Postdoctoral fellow, Field Research Center. She was a 1993 MacArthur Fellow
Works
- Behavioral neurobiology of birdsong, Editors Harris Philip Zeigler, Peter Marler, New York Academy of Sciences, 2004, ISBN 978-1-57331-472-5
gollark: I will be VERY HAPPY when Trump's idiotic voice and rhetoric gets off the radio Herr.
gollark: It was clearly rigged. Obama was in the lead until the mail-in votes started arriving.
gollark: Is there someone at Twitter HQ just frantically adding different variations of "this is basically a lie" to his tweets?
gollark: It does stop that specific case as far as I know.
gollark: > I'm partial to multiple choice voting, basically ranked choice but you just select all the options you'd be okay with and they're counted equallyAlso called approval voting, but I'm pretty sure that it's not true that it stops strategic voting.
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-12-30. Retrieved 2010-04-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "She knows why the caged bird sings Heather Williams studies the secrets of bird song", The Boston Globe, M. R. Montgomery, August 26, 1993
External links
- "Bird Song Discoveries May Lead To Refinement Of Darwinian Theory", ScienceDaily (Jan. 31, 2009)
- Essel Program, Annual Report 2002
- Notable women in the life sciences: a biographical dictionary, Editors Benjamin F. Shearer, Barbara Smith Shearer, Greenwood Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0-313-29302-3
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