William M. Fields
William M. Fields (born 1949), also known by the lexigram , is an American qualitative investigator studying language, culture, and tools in non-human primates. He is best known for his collaboration with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh beginning in 1997 at the Language Research Center of Georgia State University. There he co-reared Nyota , a baby bonobo, with Panbanisha , Kanzi and Savage-Rumbaugh . Fields and Savage-Rumbaugh are the only scientists in the world carrying out language research with bonobos.
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
William M. Fields
William M. Fields (born 1949), also known by the lexigram , is an American qualitative investigator studying language, culture, and tools in non-human primates. He is best known for his collaboration with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh beginning in 1997 at the Language Research Center of Georgia State University. There he co-reared Nyota , a baby bonobo, with Panbanisha , Kanzi and Savage-Rumbaugh . Fields and Savage-Rumbaugh are the only scientists in the world carrying out language research with bonobos.
has abstract
William M. Fields (born 1949), ...... anguage research with bonobos.
@en
birth place
birth year
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
18,750,295
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
997,323,744
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
birth date
birth place
caption
William M. Fields with Nyota
@en
name
William M. Fields
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
hypernym
sameAs
comment
William M. Fields (born 1949), ...... anguage research with bonobos.
@en
label
William M. Fields
@en
wasDerivedFrom
homepage
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
William M. Fields
@en