Robert Elliott Johnston

Affiliations: 
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States 
Area:
Behavioral Neuroendocrinology
Website:
http://people.psych.cornell.edu/~rej1/index.html
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"Robert Elliott Johnston"
Bio:

(1942 - 2014)
http://news.cornell.edu/stories/2015/01/psychology-professor-robert-elliott-johnston-dies-72

Mean distance: 13.46 (cluster 19)
 
SNBCP

Parents

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Carl Pfaffmann grad student 1970 Rockefeller
 (Scent marking, olfactory communication and social behavior in the golden hamster, Mesocricetus auratus.)

Children

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Alex B. LaVenture research assistant 2007-2009 Cornell
Aras Petrulis grad student Cornell
Emilie Rissman grad student Cornell
Wen-Sung Lai grad student 1998-2003 Cornell
Kevin G. Bath grad student 2000-2005 Cornell
Samantha C. Larimer Bousquet grad student 2007 Cornell
Erik R. Patel grad student 2012 Cornell
Marcela Fernández-Vargas grad student 2008-2015
Michael H. Ferkin post-doc Cornell
Jill M. Mateo post-doc Cornell
Javier d. delBarco-Trillo post-doc 2006- Cornell
BETA: Related publications

Publications

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Harruff RC, Johnston R, Lubin M, et al. (2023) Analysis of female strangulation homicides in King County, Washington, from 1978 to 2022. Journal of Forensic Sciences
Fernández-Vargas M, Johnston RE. (2015) Ultrasonic vocalizations in golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) reveal modest sex differences and nonlinear signals of sexual motivation. Plos One. 10: e0116789
Place NJ, Vernon DM, Johnston RE. (2014) Reduced mate preference for dominant over subordinate males in old female Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). Behavioural Processes. 108: 166-72
Delbarco-Trillo J, Johnston RE. (2013) Interactions with heterospecific males do not affect how female Mesocricetus hamsters respond to conspecific males. Animal Behaviour. 86: 151-156
delBarco-Trillo J, Johnston RE. (2012) Asymmetric learning to avoid heterospecific males in Mesocricetus hamsters. Zoology (Jena, Germany). 115: 270-4
Delbarco-Trillo J, Johnston RE. (2011) Adult female hamsters require long and sustained exposures to heterospecific males to avoid interspecific mating. Evolutionary Ecology. 25: 391-401
delBarco-Trillo J, Johnston RE. (2011) Avoidance of interspecific mating in female Syrian hamsters is stronger toward familiar than toward unfamiliar heterospecific males. Learning & Behavior. 39: 239-44
delBarco-Trillo J, McPhee ME, Johnston RE. (2011) Syrian hamster males below an age threshold do not elicit aggression from unfamiliar adult males. Aggressive Behavior. 37: 91-7
Delbarco-Trillo J, Johnston RE. (2011) Effect of losing a fight on later agonistic behavior toward unfamiliar conspecifics in male Syrian hamsters Current Zoology. 57: 449-452
Larimer SC, Fritzsche P, Song Z, et al. (2011) Foraging behavior of golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) in the wild Journal of Ethology. 29: 275-283
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