Margaret Altmann
#62,993
Most Influential Person Across History
German American biologist
Margaret Altmann's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Margaret Altmannbiology Degrees
Biology
#8171
Historical Rank
Genetics
#978
Historical Rank
Molecular Biology
#2821
Historical Rank

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Biology
Why Is Margaret Altmann Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Margaret Altmann was a German-American biologist focusing on animal husbandry and psychobiology. She was one of the first women to work in the psychobiology, ethology and animal husbandry fields, with a focus on livestock.
Margaret Altmann's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Social Behavior of Elk, Cervus Canadensis Nelsoni, in the Jackson Hole Area of Wyoming (1951) (82)
- The Flight Distance in Free-Ranging Big Game (1958) (62)
- Social integration of the moose calf (1958) (43)
- Sociometrics of Macaca mulatta: II. Decoupling centrality and dominance in rhesus monkey social networks. (1988) (36)
- Inter-relations of the sex cycle and the behavior of the sow (1941) (31)
- Group Dynamics in Wyoming Moose During the Rutting Season (1959) (23)
- THE INFLUENCE OF ESTROGENS IN EGG YOLK UPON AVIAN BLOOD CALCIUM (1938) (18)
- The role of juvenile elk and moose in the social dynamics of their species (1960) (9)
- A study of patterns of activity and neighborly relations in swine. (1941) (6)
- A Study of Behavior in a Horse-Mule: With Animal Sociograms (1951) (5)
- Two Marking Devices for Large Land Mammals (1956) (4)
- BIOELECTRIC POTENTIAL AS INDICATOR OF OVULATION IN THE HEN. (1940) (3)
- Moose Runs from Sandhill Crane (1960) (2)
- How early was "imprinting" observed? (1964) (1)
- Moose, Alces alces, Battles Horse in Water (1955) (1)
- The Social Role of the Aging Ungulate (1962) (0)
- A Comparative Study of Interspecies Communications (1968) (0)
- Investigation of Communication Systems in Free-Ranging Wild Ungulates (1974) (0)
- The Social Role of the Juvenile Elk and Moose (1958) (0)
- The endocrine basis for the rise in blood calcium associated with egg laying in the fowl. (1937) (0)
- A Study of Social Behavior Patterns in Moose of Wyoming (1956) (0)
- The Social Role of the Aging Ungulate. Project Number 77. (1960) (0)
- A Comparative Study of Communications in Big Game (1972) (0)
- A Comparative Study of Negative Messages in Big Game Herds (1966) (0)
- Patterns of Herd Structure in Free-ranging Elk of Wyoming (1954) (0)
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