NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
LETTERS including Psychoneuroimmunology, Neuropsychopharmacology,
Reproductive Medicine, Chronobiology
and
Human Ethology
ISSN 0172780X
Related
Article: Human Pheromones: "Integrating Neuroendocrinology
and Ethology" [abstract]
[Full text]
2001;
22:322 pii:
NEL220501X02
RECIPIENTS
OF
"ZDENEK KLEIN AWARD FOR HUMAN ETHOLOGY" 2001:
SHORT BIOGRAPHIES
Karl
Grammer
Born
1950. He studied zoology, anthropology, and physics in Munich,
Germany. 1982 doctoral degree at the University of Munich. 1985
Professor at the Max-Planck Research Station for Human Behavior.
Since 1991 Scientific and Administrative Director of the Ludwig
Boltzmann Institute for Urban Ethology in Vienna, Austria. Senior
Secretary of the International Society for Human Ethology (ISHE).
James
Vaughan Kohl
Independent
Researcher and scientist at Partell Medical Center in Las Vegas,
Nevada, USA. He has devoted over fifteen years to researching
the relationship between odors and sexual behavior. He is co-author
(together with Robert T. Francoeur) of the book "The Scent
of Eros: Mysteries of Odor in Human Sexuality", Continuum,
New York 1995. Member of the Society for the Scientific Study
of Sexuality, the Association for Chemoreception Sciences and
the International Society for Human Ethology.
Bernhard
Fink
Born
1973. He studied Human Ethology at the Ludwig-Boltzmann-Institute
for Urban Ethology in Vienna and is still enrolled for his Master
of Psychology at the University of Vienna. His main areas of
interests are human attractiveness, non-verbal communication
and their application to human modeling. He is currently a member
of six scientific societies and shares several collaborations
with biologists, psychologists and computer scientists.
Michaela
Atzmueller
Born
1973. She studied zoology and anthropology at the University
of Vienna. 1998 MA with thesis on human pheromones and male
cooperation. 2001 Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of
Vienna with thesis on risk-taking in young human males and its
manifestation in their nonverbal behaviour. Scientific interests:
hormonal influences on human behaviour.