Brooke E. Flammang
American biologist
Brooke E. Flammang's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Biology
Brooke E. Flammang's Degrees
- Bachelors Biology University of California, San Diego
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Why Is Brooke E. Flammang Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Brooke E. Flammang is an American biologist at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. She specializes in functional morphology, biomechanics, and bioinspired technology of fishes. Flammang is a discoverer of the radialis muscle in shark tails. She also studies the adhesive disc of the remora, and the walking cavefish, Cryptotora thamicola. Her work has been profiled by major news outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Wired, BBC Radio 5, Discovery Channel, and National Geographic Wild. She was named one of the "best shark scientists to follow" by Scientific American in 2014.
Brooke E. Flammang's Published Works
Published Works
- A robotic fish caudal fin: effects of stiffness and motor program on locomotor performance (2012) (178)
- Caudal fin shape modulation and control during acceleration, braking and backing maneuvers in bluegill sunfish, Lepomis macrochirus (2009) (107)
- Extremely fast prey capture in pipefish is powered by elastic recoil (2008) (94)
- Volumetric imaging of fish locomotion (2011) (87)
- Passive robotic models of propulsion by the bodies and caudal fins of fish. (2012) (86)
- Volumetric imaging of shark tail hydrodynamics reveals a three-dimensional dual-ring vortex wake structure (2011) (85)
- Speed-dependent intrinsic caudal fin muscle recruitment during steady swimming in bluegill sunfish, Lepomis macrochirus (2008) (75)
- Remora fish suction pad attachment is enhanced by spinule friction (2015) (54)
- Functional morphology of the fin rays of teleost fishes (2013) (45)
- Pectoral fins aid in navigation of a complex environment by bluegill sunfish under sensory deprivation conditions (2013) (41)
- Tetrapod-like pelvic girdle in a walking cavefish (2016) (35)
- Egg cases of the genus Apristurus (Chondrichthyes: Scyliorhinidae): phylogenetic and ecological implications. (2007) (32)
- Locomotion of free-swimming ghost knifefish: anal fin kinematics during four behaviors. (2014) (31)
- Functional morphology of the radialis muscle in shark tails (2009) (31)
- Reproductive biology of deep-sea catsharks (Chondrichthyes: Scyliorhinidae) in the eastern North Pacific (2007) (28)
- Theoretical and computational fluid dynamics of an attached remora (Echeneis naucrates). (2016) (22)
- The fish tail as a derivation from axial musculoskeletal anatomy: an integrative analysis of functional morphology. (2014) (22)
- Bioinspired remora adhesive disc offers insight into evolution (2019) (19)
- Prey capture kinematics and four-bar linkages in the bay pipefish, Syngnathus leptorhynchus. (2009) (16)
- Bioinspiration: applying mechanical design to experimental biology. (2011) (15)
- Functional morphology and hydrodynamics of backward swimming in bluegill sunfish, Lepomis macrochirus. (2016) (14)
- A Model of Interfacial Permeability for Soft Seals in Marine-Organism, Suction-Based Adhesion (2016) (14)
- Intraspecific and Interspecific Spatial Distribution of Three Eastern North Pacific Catshark Species and Their Egg Cases (Chondrichthyes: Scyliorhinidae) (2011) (10)
- Building a Fish: The Biology and Engineering Behind a Bioinspired Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (2017) (9)
- Channeling vorticity: modeling the filter-feeding mechanism in silver carp using μCT and 3D PIV (2018) (9)
- Remora cranial vein morphology and its functional implications for attachment (2017) (9)
- Knowing when to stick: touch receptors found in the remora adhesive disc (2020) (9)
- Remoras pick where they stick on blue whales (2020) (8)
- Hover kinematics and distributed pressure sensing for force control of biorobotic fins (2012) (7)
- Skeletal and muscular pelvic morphology of hillstream loaches (Cypriniformes: Balitoridae) (2020) (6)
- Morphology, performance and fluid dynamics of the crayfish escape response (2020) (5)
- Future Tail Tales: A Forward-Looking, Integrative Perspective on Tail Research. (2021) (5)
- Flexibility of Heterocercal Tails: What Can the Functional Morphology of Shark Tails Tell Us about Ichthyosaur Swimming? (2019) (4)
- Sucker with a fat lip: The soft tissues underlying the viscoelastic grip of remora adhesion (2020) (4)
- Development of a vortex generator to perturb fish locomotion (2017) (3)
- Morphology, performance, and fluid dynamics of the crayfish escape response. (2020) (2)
- The morphological basis of labriform rowing in the deep-sea Bigscale Scopelogadus beanii (Percomorpha: Beryciformes) (2014) (1)
- Evidence for mechanical power amplification in suction feeding pipefish (2007) (1)
- An Adaptable Flying Fish Robotic Model for Aero- and Hydrodynamic Experimentation. (2022) (1)
- Bioinspired Design in Research: Evolution as Beta-Testing. (2022) (1)
- Functional Morphology of the Remora Adhesive Disc (2015) (0)
- Using robotics and physics to understand the evolution of novel functional morphologies (2020) (0)
- They like to move it (move it): walking kinematics of balitorid loaches of Thailand. (2022) (0)
- Early-career researchers: an interview with Brooke Flammang (2018) (0)
- Parenting Through Academia as a SICB member. (2020) (0)
- Author Correction: Remora cranial vein morphology and its functional implications for attachment (2018) (0)
- Author Correction: Remora cranial vein morphology and its functional implications for attachment (2018) (0)
- Remora cranial vein morphology and its functional implications for attachment (2017) (0)
- Parenting Through Academia as a SICB Member Integrative and Comparative Biology (2020) (0)
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