Stuart West

Stuart West is an evolutionary biologist studying social evolution as a Professor of Evolutionary Biology in the Zoology Department at the University of Oxford.

His primary research interests are in the area of social evolution, sex allocation theory and microbial evolution. His research has attracted much media attention,[1] and has been published in high profile journals such as Nature, Science, PNAS and Current Biology.

He was a Distinguished Junior Scholar in Residence at the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies, University of British Columbia, Canada in 1999 and he has won the Philip Leverhulme Prize for Zoology (2006), the Scientific Medal of the Zoological Society of London (2006) [2] and the rising star award [3] from the Duke of Edinburgh.

  • Scientific homepage
gollark: https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/426116061415342080/930214779619008532/2_5395659120659403877.mp4
gollark: I think you can work out where it is using perpendicular bisector technology.
gollark: Anyway, for some reason I forgot, the boundary between things where you go from being closer to one point than another is always a straight line.
gollark: No.
gollark: So |z+7| is distance to -7, and |z-1| is distance to 1.

References


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