«It goes to show the power of «thank you,»» said the study's lead author Allen Barton, a former doctoral student in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences and
current postdoctoral research associate at UGA's Center for Family Research.
Not exact matches
Researchers Michael Tobler,
associate professor of biology, and Zach Culumber, former university
postdoctoral research associate and
current postdoctoral researcher at Florida State University, studied 112 species of live - bearing fish and found that males and females evolve differently: Female evolution is influenced more strongly by natural selection and the environment, while male evolution is influenced more strongly by sexual selection, which involves characteristics that females find desirable or that make them superior competitors for females.
In addition to Rubenstein, arguably the world's leading expert on zebras, the study's co-authors were Alec Chan - Golston and Elizabeth Li, former UCLA undergraduates in mathematics; Ryan Harrigan, an assistant adjunct professor in UCLA's Center for Tropical
Research; and Henri Thomassen, a former UCLA postdoctoral scholar and current research associate at the Institute for Evolution and Ecology at Germany's University of T
Research; and Henri Thomassen, a former UCLA
postdoctoral scholar and
current research associate at the Institute for Evolution and Ecology at Germany's University of T
research associate at the Institute for Evolution and Ecology at Germany's University of Tübingen.
Going back 10 or 15 years, researchers began noting that grateful people had stronger, happier relationships, says Allen W. Barton, PhD, a
postdoctoral research associate at the Center for Family Research at the University of Georgia and the lead author of the curren
research associate at the Center for Family
Research at the University of Georgia and the lead author of the curren
Research at the University of Georgia and the lead author of the
current study.