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Michelle Lampl Emory University Atlanta, GA 30322 tele: (404) 727-2214 email:[email protected] PERSONAL DATA Place of Birth: Denver, Colorado USA Education B.A. 1975 University of Pennsylvania, magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa Ph.D. 1983 University of Pennsylvania, Anthropology M.D. 1989 University of Pennsylvania Focal Research: The mechanisms of growth and development, with a focus on fetal and infant growth patterns. Research program aims include defining “growth cascade biology” and the development of growth-centered models for inquiry directed at understanding the nexus of gene expression, energy and metabolism, endocrine control and immune development across developmental ages from the fetus to adolescence, with implications for lifespan biology. Present Research Projects 1. Fetal growth: Investigations into the nature of fetal adaptability during growth, biological variability in fetal growth patterns (Roberto Romero, David Barker, Philippe Jeanty, collaborators). 2. Methods: Noninvasive biomarker development: Dean Jones, Emory University Biomarker Laboratory; Amanda Thompson, UNC Chapel Hill, collaborators. 3. Growth-event focused paradigms: Documenting growth as it occurs, in unique events, permits a novel approach to understanding how diet, illness and other environmental factors influence growth biology and how growth biology influences parental caretaking. Specific aims of longitudinal studies in progress include hypotheses about health and behavior patterns surrounding growth spurts. Specific questions of data analyses include considerations of the energy cost of growth, cross talk between oxidative, inflammatory and regenerative potential during growth. Proximal correlates of episodic growth. Administrative Positions 2011- Director, Center for the Study of Human Health, Emory University 2007- Associate Director, Emory University/Georgia Institute of Technology Predictive Health Robert W. Woodruff Health Sciences Center The aim of the PHI is to re-focus health care on health. Advances in bioscience permit the measurement of risks and deviations in health, and identify the commonality of processes that underlie many diseases. The Institute works to identify early interventions that promote health maintenance based on an individual's personal health profile. 2005- Co-Director, Emory University Predictive Health Initiative 2009-11 Co-Director Scholarly Integrity Project of Emory University, an NSF ORI/ Council of Graduate Schools funded initiative to promote Responsible Conduct of Research. (Mark Risjord, Associate Dean and Lisa Tedesco, Dean of the Laney Graduate School of Emory University):

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Michelle Lampl Emory University

Atlanta, GA 30322 tele: (404) 727-2214

email:[email protected]

PERSONAL DATA Place of Birth: Denver, Colorado USA Education B.A. 1975 University of Pennsylvania, magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa Ph.D. 1983 University of Pennsylvania, Anthropology M.D. 1989 University of Pennsylvania Focal Research: The mechanisms of growth and development, with a focus on fetal and infant growth patterns. Research program aims include defining “growth cascade biology” and the development of growth-centered models for inquiry directed at understanding the nexus of gene expression, energy and metabolism, endocrine control and immune development across developmental ages from the fetus to adolescence, with implications for lifespan biology. Present Research Projects 1. Fetal growth: Investigations into the nature of fetal adaptability during growth, biological

variability in fetal growth patterns (Roberto Romero, David Barker, Philippe Jeanty, collaborators).

2. Methods: Noninvasive biomarker development: Dean Jones, Emory University Biomarker Laboratory; Amanda Thompson, UNC Chapel Hill, collaborators.

3. Growth-event focused paradigms: Documenting growth as it occurs, in unique events, permits a novel approach to understanding how diet, illness and other environmental factors influence growth biology and how growth biology influences parental caretaking. Specific aims of longitudinal studies in progress include hypotheses about health and behavior patterns surrounding growth spurts. Specific questions of data analyses include considerations of the energy cost of growth, cross talk between oxidative, inflammatory and regenerative potential during growth. Proximal correlates of episodic growth.

Administrative Positions 2011- Director, Center for the Study of Human Health, Emory University 2007- Associate Director, Emory University/Georgia Institute of Technology Predictive Health

Robert W. Woodruff Health Sciences Center The aim of the PHI is to re-focus health care on health. Advances in bioscience permit

the measurement of risks and deviations in health, and identify the commonality of processes that underlie many diseases. The Institute works to identify early interventions that promote health maintenance based on an individual's personal health profile.

2005- Co-Director, Emory University Predictive Health Initiative 2009-11 Co-Director Scholarly Integrity Project of Emory University, an NSF ORI/ Council of

Graduate Schools funded initiative to promote Responsible Conduct of Research. (Mark Risjord, Associate Dean and Lisa Tedesco, Dean of the Laney Graduate School of Emory University):

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Scientific, Academic Positions 2007- Research Specialist in Fetal Growth, Perinatal Research Branch, NICHD. Detroit,

Michigan (Roberto Romero, Director) 2006- Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor, Emory University 2005- University Predictive Health Initiative co-Chair (with Kenneth Brigham, M.D.,

School of Medicine) 2005- Professor, Department of Anthropology, Emory University 1998-2005 Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Emory University 1995 Adjunct Faculty, Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Emory University 1994-1998 Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, Emory University 1990-99 Research Associate, Laboratoire d'Anthropologie, Université de

Bordeaux I, 33405 Talence, France 1988-1994 Lecturer, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania 1991-1994 Lecturer, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of

Pennsylvania School of Medicine 1991 Visiting Lecturer, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, (June-July) University of Cape Town, South Africa (Human Biology) 1985 Lecturer, Department of Anthropology, Princeton University 1984-85 Instructor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Rutgers University, Camden, N.J. 1983 Instructor, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania 1977,'78,'82 Teaching Fellow, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania 1989-90 Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania 1985-88 Postdoctoral Researcher, University Museum, University of Pennsylvania 1983-85 Research Associate, Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Hospital/Medical College of Pennsylvania 1982 Research Assistant, Robert Emde, M.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Medical Center 1975-83 Research Assistant, Francis Johnston, Ph.D. Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania Scholarly Awards 2010 Elected AAAS Fellow

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PUBLICATIONS

Articles in Refereed Journals Manuscripts in Review: Eriksson JG, Kajantie E, Lampl M, Osmond C, Barker DJP. Small head size at birth and early age at adiposity rebound. J Peds. Barker DJP, Lampl M. Preventing chronic disease by improving human development. Int J Epidmiology Published Articles In press Eriksson JG, Kajantie E, Lampl M, Osmond C, Barker DJP Markers of biological fitness

as predictors of all-cause mortality. Ann Med 2012 Lampl M. Perspectives on modeling human growth: Mathematical models and growth

biology. Ann Hum Biol Jul 27 (doi:10.3109/03014460.2012.704072) 2012 Barker DJP, Lampl M, Roseboom T, Winder N. Resource allocation in utero and health in

later life. Placenta. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.placenta.2012.06.009 2012 Lampl M, Lee W, Koo W, Frongillo EA, Barker D, Romero R. Ethnic differences in the

accumulation of lean and fat mass in late gestation. Am J Hum Biol May 7 doi:10.1002/ajhb.22285 Epub ahead of print.

2011 Frongillo E, Lampl M., Early identification of children at risk of later obesity. Invited

editorial, Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine 165 (11): 1043-4. 2011 Thompson AL, Whitten PL, Lampl M. Measurement of testosterone in infant fecal

samples. Am J Hum Biol 23(6):820-2. 2011 Melby M, Lampl M. Menopause: A bio-cultural perspective. Annual Review of

Anthropology 40:53-70. 2011 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Infant growth in length follows prolonged sleep and increased

naps. Sleep 34(5): 641-650. 2011 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Infant head circumference increments are saltatory and coupled

to length growth. Early Human Development 87: 361-8 2010 Thompson AL, Whitten PL, Johnson ML, Lampl M. Noninvasive methods for estradiol recovery from infant fecal samples. Frontiers in Physiology 1:148. 2010 Lampl M, Gotsch F, Kusanovic JP, Gomez R, Nien JK, Frongillo EA, Romero R. Sex

differences in fetal growth response to maternal height and weight. American Journal of Human Biology 22:431-443.

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2009 Lampl M. Human growth from the cell to the organism: Saltations and integrative physiology. Annals Human Biology 36:478-495.

2009 Lampl, M, Kusanovic JP, Erez O, Gotsch F, Espinoza J, Gonçalves L, Lee W, Gomez R,

Nien JK, Frongillo EA, Romero R. Growth perturbations in a rapid fetal growth phenotype preceding preterm labor and term birth. American Journal of Human Biology 21: 782-792.

2009 Lampl, M, Kusanovic JP, Erez O, Espinoza J, Gotsch F, Gonçalves L, Gomez R, Nien

JK, Frongillo EA, Romero R (2009). Early rapid growth, early birth: Accelerated fetal growth and spontaneous late preterm birth. American Journal of Human Biology 21:141-150.

2008 Lampl, M, Gotsch F, Kusanovic JP, Espinoza J, Gonçalves L, Gomez R, Nien JK,

Frongillo EA, Romero R. Downward percentile-crossing as an indicator of an adverse prenatal environment. Annals of Human Biology 35:1-13.

2007 Lampl M, Thompson AL. Growth chart curves do not describe individual growth biology.

American Journal of Human Biology 19:643-653. 2005 Hsu L, Lampl M, Meyappan J. Parent assessment of risk in sickle cell hydroxyurea

treatment. J Pediatric Hematology/Oncology 27: 644-650. 2005 Lampl M, Thompson AL, Frongillo EA. Sex differences in the relationships among weight

gain, subcutaneous skinfolds, and saltatory length growth spurts in infancy, Pediatric Research 58:1238-42.

2005 Lampl M, Kuzawa C, Jeanty P. Growth patterns of the heart and kidney suggest inter-

organ collaboration in facultative fetal growth, American Journal of Human Biology 17: 178-194.

2005 Lampl, M. Cellular life histories and bow-tie biology. American Journal of Human Biology 17:66-80. 2004 Noonan KJ, Farnum CE, Leiferman EM, Lampl M, Markel MD, Wilsman NJ. Growing

pains: Are they due to increased growth during recumbency as documented in a lamb model? Journal of Pediatric Orthopedics 24:726-731.

2004 Lampl M, Jeanty P. Exposure to maternal diabetes is associated with altered fetal growth patterns: A hypothesis regarding metabolic allocation to growth under hyperglycemic-hypoxemic conditions. American Journal of Human Biology 16:237-263.

2003 Lampl M, Jeanty P. Timing is everything: A reconsideration of fetal growth patterns identifies the importance of individual and sex differences. American Journal of Human Biology 15:667-680.

2003 Lampl M, Kuzawa CW, Jeanty P. Prenatal smoke exposure alters growth in limb

proportions and head shape in the midgestation human fetus. American Journal of Human Biology 15:533-546.

2002 Lampl M, Kuzawa CW, Jeanty P. Infants thinner at birth exhibit smaller kidneys for

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their size in late gestation in a sample of fetuses with appropriate growth. American Journal of Human Biology 14:398-406.

2001 Lampl M, Birch L, Picciano MF, Johnson ML, Frongillo EA Jr. The child factor in

measurement dependability. American Journal of Human Biology 13:548-557.

2001 Lampl M, Johnson ML, Frongillo EA. Mixed distribution analysis identifies saltation and stasis growth. Annals of Human Biology 28:403-411.

2001 Johnson ML, Straume M, Lampl M. The use of regularity as estimated by approximate

entropy to distinguish saltatory growth. Annals of Human Biology 28:491-504. 2000 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Distribution methods and analysis of nonlinear longitudinal data.

[review] Methods in Enzymology 321:182-195. 2000 Johnson ML, Lampl M, Straume M. Distinguishing models of growth with approximate

entropy. [review] Methods in Enzymology. 321:196-207. 2000 Lampl M, Mann A, Monge J. A Comparison of calcification staging and histological

methods for ageing immature modern human specimens. Anthropologie XXXVIII/1: 51-62.

1998 Lampl M, Ashizawa K, Kawabata M, Johnson ML. An example of variation and pattern in

saltation and stasis growth dynamics. Annals of Human Biology 25:203-219. 1998 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Wrinkles induced by the use of smoothing functions to iron-out

serial data. Annals of Human Biology 25:187-202. 1997 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Identifying saltatory growth patterns in infancy: A comparison of

results based on measurement protocol. American Journal of Human Biology 9:343-356. 1996 Johnson ML, Veldhuis JD, Lampl M. Is growth saltatory? The usefulness and limitations

of frequency distributions in analyzing pulsatile data. Endocrinology 137:5197-5204. 1996 Lampl M, Johnston FE. Problems in the aging of skeletal juveniles: Perspectives from

maturation assessments of living children. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 101:345-356.

1995 Tillier A-m, Mann AE, Monge JM, Lampl M. L'ontogenese, la croissance de l'email

dentaire et l'origine de l'homme moderne: l'exemple des Neandertaliens. Anthropologie et Prehistoire 106:97-104.

1995 Lampl M, Cameron N, Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML. Human Growth Patterns. Science

268:445-447. 1995 Lampl M. How children grow. Pediatric Basics 72:10-16. 1995 Johnson ML, Lampl M. Methods for the analysis of saltatory data in infancy. Methods in Neuroscience 28:364-387.

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1993 Johnson ML, Lampl M. Artifacts of fourier series analysis. Methods in Enzymology. 240: 51-68.

1993 Lampl M. La croissance saltatoire chez le nourrisson. Bull. et Mem. de la Societe d'Anthropologie de Paris, n.s., 5:53-60. 1993 Lampl M. Evidence of saltatory growth in infancy. American Journal of Human Biology,

5: 641-652. 1993 Lampl M, Johnson ML. A case study of daily growth during adolescence: A single spurt

or changes in the dynamics of saltatory growth? Annals of Human Biology 20:595-605. 1993 Lampl M, Monge J, Mann AE. Further observations on a method for estimating hominoid

dental development patterns. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 90:113-127. 1992 Lampl M, Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML. Saltation and stasis: A model of human growth.

Science 258:801-803. 1992 Lampl M. Further observations on diurnal variation in standing height. Annals of Human

Biology 19:87-90. 1991 Lampl M, Mann AE, Monge J, Tillier A-m. L'email dentaire: Une horloge controversée.

La Recherche 236:1225-1227. 1991 Mann A, Lampl M, Monge J. Investigation into the relationship between perikymata

counts and crown formation times. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 86:175-188.

1990 Mann A, Lampl, M, Monge J. Patterns of ontogeny in human evolution: Evidence from dental development. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 33:111-150. 1990 Mann A, Lampl M, Monge J. Dental caution. Nature 348:202. 1990 Mann A, Lampl M, Monge J. Decomptes de Perikymaties chez les enfants neandertalienes de Krapina. Bull. et Mem. de la Soc. d'Anthrop. de Paris 2:219-228. 1988 Wolpoff M, Lampl M, Monge J. Was Taung human or an ape? Nature 335:501. 1987 Mann A, Lampl M. Monge J. Maturational patterns in early hominids. Nature 328:673-

674. 1978 Lampl M, Johnston FE, Malcolm LA. The effects of protein supplementation on the

growth and skeletal maturation of New Guinean school children. Annals of Human Biology 5:219-227.

Letters to the editor 1999 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Wrinkles induced by the use of smoothing procedures applied to serial growth data. Annals of Human Biology 26:494-496.

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1997 Lampl M, Frongillo EF, Johnson ML. Stasis without saltation? Annals of Human Biology 24:65-68.

Edited volume 1999 Lampl M. (editor) Saltation and Stasis in Human Growth and Development: Evidence,

methods and theory. London: Smith-Gordon Nishimura. International Association for Human Auxology, Advances in the Study of Human Growth and Development: N°1. London.

Books 1999 Kricun M, Monge JM, Mann AE, Finkel G, Lampl M, Radovcic J, The Krapina Hominids.

A Radiographic Atlas of the Skeletal Collection. Zagreb: Croatian Natural History Museum.

Manuscripts in Preparation

Lampl M, Johnson ML. Saltatory infant length growth is coupled to illness episodes

suggesting osteoimmunological connections in normal growth Lampl M, Lee W, Frongillo EA, Barker DJP, Romero R. Maternal weight benefits male

lean mass at birth Lampl M. Thompson AL. From the mouth of babes: The biomedical discourse on

teething and illness, the data and the dilemma Journal Articles Reprinted 1992 Lampl M, Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML. Pousse de croissance et stagnation: un modele de

la croissance chez l'homme. le Journal Internationale de Medecine. No. 254:45-48 (reprint of English Science 258: 801-3.).

1991 Lampl M, Mann AE, Monge J, Tillier A-m. El Esmalte dental: un reloj controvertido. El

Mundo Cientifico 119: 1215-1217. (reprinted from French La Recherche 254:1225-1227).

1991 Mann A, Lampl M, Monge J. Patterns of ontogeny in human evolution: Evidence from

dental development. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 33: 111-150. Reprinted in: Paleoanthropology Annuals. Volume 1. 1990. Delson E, Tattersall I, Van Couvering J. (eds) Garland, Pp. 69-98.

Chapters and Requested Contributions 2012 Lampl, M. “Saltation and stasis.” In, Cameron, N and Bogin B. Editors, Human Growth

and Development 2nd edition. Elsevier, Oxford. in press. 2011 Lampl M. Limitations of growth chart curves in terms of individual growth biology.

Chapter 181. Handbook of Growth and Growth Monitoring in Health and Disease. Preedy, V. (Editor), Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, UK.

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2008 Lampl M. Infant Physical Growth. Encyclopedia of Infant and Early Childhood

Development. Haith, M. and Benson, J. Eds. Elsevier, Oxford. 2004 Lampl M. The French. Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology. Volume 2: Ember, C &

Ember, M. (Eds.) Kluwer Pub. Pp. 646-655. 2002 Lampl, M. “Saltation and stasis: How children grow.” In, Cameron, N. Editor, Human

Growth, Academic Press. Pp. 253-270. 1999 Lampl M, Johnson ML. A consideration of methods for the identification of saltation and

stasis in human growth data. In: FE Johnston, PB Eveleth, B Zemel, (Eds) Human Growth in Context. Smith - Gordon Nishimura. International Association for Human Auxology, Advances in the Study of Human Growth and Development: N° 2., London. Pp. 25-39.

1999 Wilsman NJ, Farnum CE, Leiferman EM, Lampl M. Growth plate biology in the context of

growth by saltations and stasis. In: M Lampl (Ed) Saltation and stasis in human growth and development: Evidence, methods and theory. Smith-Gordon Nishimura. International Association for Human Auxology, Advances in the Study of Human Growth and Development: N° 1, London. Pp. 71-87.

1999 Lampl M. Saltation and stasis: Introduction to the data, methods and theory. In M Lampl

(Ed) Saltation and stasis in human growth and development: Evidence, methods and theory. Smith-Gordon Nishimura. International Association for Human Auxology, Advances in the Study of Human Growth and Development: N° 1., London. Pp. 1-18.

1999 Lampl M. Saltatory growth: A review of the evidence and a consideration of the

implications. In: M Lampl (Ed) Saltation and stasis in human growth and development: Evidence, methods and theory. Smith-Gordon, Nishimura. International Association for Human Auxology, Advances in the Study of Human Growth and Development: N° 1. London. Pp. 133-141.

1998 Lampl M, Johnson ML. Normal human growth as saltatory: Adaptation through

irregularity. In: K Newell, P Molenaar (Eds) Dynamical Systems in Development. Lawrence Erlbaum, Inc., Pubs. Pp. 15-38.

1998 Encyclopedia entries: Lampl, M. Longitudinal analysis (1000 words), pp.60-61. Saltatory

growth (500 words) p. 222. In: S Ulijaszek, FE Johnston, M Preece (Eds) Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human Growth and Development. Cambridge University Press.

1993 Lampl M. Human Growth Patterns. American Journal of Human Biology 5:601-603. 1993 Lampl M. The evolution of sex roles. In: Goren Burenhult (Ed) The First Humans.

Human Origins and History to 10,000 B.C. Weldon-Owen Pubs. Pp. 30-31. 1984 Johnston FE, Lampl M. Anthropometry in studies of malnutrition and behavior. In: JA

Brozek (Ed) Malnutrition and Behavior: Critical Assessment of Key Issues. Lausanne: Nestles Foundation. Pp. 51-70.

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1983 Lampl M, Emde RN. Episodic growth in infancy: A preliminary report of length, head circumference and behavior. In: KW Fischer (Ed) Levels and Transitions in Children's Development. New Directions for Child Development, No. 21: 21-36. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

1979 Lampl M, Blumberg BS. Blood polymorphisms and the origins of New World populations.

In, Harper (Ed) The First Americans: Origins, Affinities and Adaptations. Gustav Fischer New York, Stuttgart. Pp. 107-124.

Abstracts: Reviewed, published

2012 Krishnan S, Al Mheid I, Rajasingham A, Brigham KL, Lampl M, Quyyumi A. Low birth

weight is independently associated with measures of arterial stiffness in healthy adults. American Heart Association November 5, 2012.

2011 Thompson AL, Lampl M, Lund PK, Azcarate-Peril A. Developmental microbial ecology: the effects of age and diet on the establishment of intestinal microflora in infants. Am J Hum Biol, 23, 280.

2008 Thompson AL, Lampl M. Sex differences in infant growth and hormonal development in

an evolutionary reproductive ecology perspective. American Journal of Human Biology 20: 235-6.

2007 Thompson AL, Lampl M. HPG activation in infancy: Relationship to sex and size.

American Journal of Human Biology 19: 283. 2007 Thompson AL, Lampl M. Feeding, hormones and body composition. American Journal

of Physical Anthropology 132 (S44). 2006 Lampl M. Saltatory growth biology, dynamic systems and selection. American Journal of

Human Biology 17:281. 2006 Thompson AL, Lampl M, Whitten P Measurement of testosterone from infant fecal

samples/ American Journal of Physical Anthropology 129:123. 2005 Lampl M Grandma’s right: A sleeping baby may be a growing baby. American Journal of

Physical Anthropology 126: 138. 2005 Lampl M, Frongillo EA A shifting resources model of the cost of linear growth. American

Journal of Human Biology 17: 247-248. 2005 Thompson AL, Lampl M, Millett J, Whitten P Noninvasive methods for steroid

measurement during infancy. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 126:210. 2005 Quinn EA, Thompson AL, Lampl M. Into the mouths of babes: Developmental cross-talk.

American Journal of Human Biology 17: 254. 2005 Quinn EA, Lampl M.. Beyond the weanling’s dilemma: feeding patterns as a predictor of

infant health in the first year of life. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 126:173.

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2004 Lampl M. Fetal growth and development: How cells build a body. Symposium, “Fetal origins of developmental plasticity.” American Journal of Human Biology 16: 234.

2004 Thompson AL, Lampl M. Alterations in growth rate underlie fetal adaptive strategies

Invited paper for Symposium “From Conception to Birth: Selective Pressures Shaping Pregnancy and its Outcomes” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 123 (S38): 194.

2003 Wilsman NJ, Farnum CE, Leiferman EM, Markel M, and Lampl M. Bone elongation in

lambs occurs during recumbency not standing / ambulation. Trans. Orthop. Res. Soc., 28.

2003 Lampl M. Fetus to infant in biomedical perspective. American Journal of Physical

Anthropology Supplement 120 (S36):135. 2003 Thompson AL, Harris L, Lampl M. Fueling infant growth: A longitudinal study of body

composition and length. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 120: 207.

2002 Lampl M, Jeanty P. Timing Is Everything: Second and third trimester growth in fetal

weight and length and the predictability of prenatal insults. American Journal of Human Biology 14: 110.

2002 Meyappan J, Lampl M, Hsu L. Parent assessment of risk in sickle cell hydroxyurea

treatment. Pediatric Research 51:1395.

2001 Kuzawa CW, Lampl M, Jeanty P. Fetal origins of adult disease: Prenatal insult or normal growth variation? American Journal of Human Biology 13: 128.

2001 Lampl M, Kuzawa CW, Jeanty P. Building a body and a head: Sexual dimorphism under

fetal constraint. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 114 (S32): 95. 2000 Lampl M, Walrath D, Jeanty P. Fetal growth patterns: Responsivity and adaptation.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 111:205. 1998 Lampl M, Jeanty P, Walrath D. Fetal growth curve spurts: Fact and fiction regarding the

fetal growth curve. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 26:146. 1998 Kuzawa CW, Lampl M. Temporal relationships between linear growth and skinfold

thickness: Stretching and filling or energetic tradeoffs? American Journal of Human Biology 10: 128.

1997 Lampl M, Jack JT. Human growth as chaos: Evolutionary implications. American Journal

of Physical Anthropology Supplement 24: 150. 1997 Glantz M, Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge J. Population variability in molar enamel thickness.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 24: 118. 1996 Lampl M. Saltatory growth and illness patterns. American Journal of Physical

Anthropology Supplement 22: 145.

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1996 Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge JM. The evolution of childhood: dental evidence of human maturation patterns. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 22: 156.

1995 Lampl M, Mann AE, Monge JM, Vandermeersch B, Tillier A-m. Variations in the dental

enamel of living peoples: implications for human origins. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 20: 129.

1995 Walrath DE, Glantz MM, Jeanty P, Lampl M. Intrauterine growth velocity: The influences

of genetic and environmental factors. American Journal of Human Biology 7: 136 (abstract 154).

1994 Lampl M. Punctuation and continuity in growth: Issues in physiological regulation.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 18: 126. 1994 Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge JM. Comparative studies of enamel structure in living and

extinct populations of Homo sapiens. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 18: 135.

1994 Birch LL, Lampl M. Evolutionary implications of saltatory growth dynamics and variability

in nutritional intake during infancy. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 18:55.

1993 Lampl M, Johnston FE. The determination and interpretation of the pattern of physical

growth of earlier hominines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 16:129.

1993 Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge JM. Population variation in the microstructure of human

dental enamel. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 16:138. 1992 Lampl M, Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML. Saltation and stasis: a model of human growth.

Science 258:801-3. 1992 Lampl M, Mann AE, Monge JM. Tooth clocks or population markers? American Journal

of Physical Anthropology Supplement 14:105. 1991 Lampl M. Daily growth in infancy. American Journal of Physical Anthropology

Supplement 12: 109 1991 Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge JM. The uses of scanning electron microscopy in the

reconstruction of neandertal lifeways. American Journal of Physical Anthropology Supplement 12: 124.

1990 Lampl M. The use of modern growth standards in ontogenetic studies of earlier

hominines. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 81: 254. 1989 Mann AE, Monge JM, Lampl M. Dental dilemma: Human, ape, intermediate? American

Journal of Physical Anthropology 78: 267. 1988 Lampl M, Mann AE, Monge JM. Ontogenetic studies of human ancestors and the

maturational rubicon. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 75:235.

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1983 Johnston FE, Lampl M. Fatness during infancy and early childhood: Data from fat cell size and anthropometry. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 60: 210.

1983 Lampl M. Postnatal infant growth: Leaps and bounds. American Journal of Physical

Anthropology 60: 215. Book Reviews 1994 Review: Growth, Maturation and Body Composition: The Fels Longitudinal Study 1929-1991. By A.F. Roche. Amer. J. Phys. Anthropol. 93:283-285.

Grants in Progress Robert W. Woodruff Foundation: Early Infancy Predictive Health Modeling: Biological Marker Extraction, Identification, Projection. Robert H Woodruff Funds. $58,000.00. Invited Lectures April 2012. “The interaction between genetics and environment to predict childhood growth” for the session, “Lifecourse Research: State of the Art Science”, Pediatric Academic Societies, April 28, Boston, MA. December, 2011 “Modeling growth” for “The Human Biology of Jim Tanner” held by the Society for the Study of Human Biology. December 13, 2011, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK December, 2011 “Ethnic variability in fetal growth” for the meeting, “Maternal offspring resource allocation,” held at the Centre for Trophoblast Research. Dec 12-13, Clare College, Cambridge, UK. October, 2011 “Growth chart curves do not describe individual growth biology” Nutrition Support Colloquium, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta @ Egleston, October 25 February, 2011 “Fetal programming: Predicting lifespan health”. Conference organized by M Lampl and DJP Barker, Emory University. December, 2010. Growth from the cell to the organism. Sixth Annual Predictive Health Symposium, Emory University January, 2010. "Growing and Development" Winter Conference of the International Society for Developmental Psychobiology. December, 2009. Commentator, "The placenta and developmental programming". Cambridge University, UK. Graham Burton, organizer. November, 2009. Speaker, 6th World Congress on Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, Santiago, Chile. Symposium, "Caring for the fetus and mother: How DOHaD influences clinical care."

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October 29-30, 2008. “How children grow," Second Annual Nutrition in the Womb Course, David Barker and Kent Thornburg, Organizers. Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon. April 1-3, 2008. “Human growth from the cell to the organism—the saltatory model of human growth. Society for the Study of Human Biology 50th Anniversary Symposium. New College, Oxford University, Oxford, England. February 15, 2008. “What do growth reference charts tell us?” Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. September 19-21, 2007. “How children grow.” For: Nutrition in the Womb Conference, David Barker and Kent Thornburg, Organizers. Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon. September 9-12 2007. “Lifestyle, growth health: Recognizing the translational biological processes.” For: XI International Congress of Auxology. Tokyo, Japan. November, 2006. Sleep and infant growth. Grand rounds, Department of Neurology, Sleep Research Center, Emory University. March, 2006. Saltatory growth, infant endocrinology and implications for aging. NIA/NICHD Workship: “Factors in Youth that Protect Aging Processes,” Maryland. March, 2006. Issues in fetal growth. NICHD, Perinatal Research Branch. Wayne State University Medical School, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Detroit, MI. September, 2005. Plenary speaker, Perinatal Research Society, Montreal, Canada. “Saltatory growth.” July, 2004. McKay Hospital Taipei, Taiwan. “What we do and do not know about normal human growth.” June, 2003. “Fetal growth patterns.” National Institute of Child Health and Development, Perinatal Research Branch, Wayne State University Medical School, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Detroit, MI. December, 2002. National Institute of Child Health and Development. Consultant, Design of infant growth assessments for the proposed National Childrens’ Growth Study. November, 2001. “How children grow”. Emory University, Board of Trustees annual meeting. April 25, 2001. Seventh International Symposium of Human Biology, Köszeg, Hungary. Keynote Lecture. “The child is father to the man: Human growth then and now.” August, 2000 IXth International Congress of Auxology, Turin, Italy. “Novel approaches to the identification of saltatory growth” (with ML Johnson). April 8, 2000 Burke Nicholson Forum: "Science & Religion: Perspectives on Suffering and Healing". Emory University. Discussant. November 22, 1999 Interdisciplinary Scientific Research Seminar Series, Emory University. “Kids grow by leaps and bounds: Saltation and stasis in human growth.”

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November 9, 1999 Last Lecture Series, Emory University. “In my last lecture…” September, 1999 Invited speaker and session chair, IVth International Anthropological Congress, August 31-September 4, 1999. Prague, Czech Republic. Session, “Growth and development,” Paper presented: “The adaptive function of irregular, saltatory growth patterns”. September 4, 1999. August, 1999 Centennial celebration of the discoveries at Krapina, Croatia. Zagreb, Croatia. “Variability in dental development patterns” (Mann A, Lampl M, Monge J). July, 1999 “Saltatory growth”. Department of Pediatrics. Hospital Garrahan, Buenos Aires, Argentina. February, 1999 Great Teachers Lecture, Emory University. “Children do grow in spurts: What it reveals about their development.” www.emory.edu/EMORY_REPORT/erarchive/1999/March/ermarch.1/3_1_99lampl.html June, 1998 Department of Anatomy, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. “Saltatory growth”. June, 1998 IV Dual Congress, International Association for the Study of Human Palaeontology and Human Biology. Johannesburg, South Africa. “Human growth flexibility through chaos” (Lampl M); “Childhood: Hypotheses for prolongation in humans” (Mann A, Monge J, Lampl M). March, 1998 “How do boys grow?” Symposium, Male Gender and Health: Anthropological Perspectives. Department of Anthropology, Emory University 20-21 March, 1998 June, 1997 VIIIth International Congress of Auxology, Philadelphia, June 30. “Modeling and analysis of growth as a saltatory phenomenon.” June, 1997 Argentine Society of Pediatrics, Buenos Aires, June 19. “How infants grow." June, 1997 Cultural and Biological Changes in Europe from the end of the Middle Paleolithic to the Neolithic, June 14, Universite de Bordeaux I, Talence, France. "The enamel microstructure of Neandertals: Contributions to our understanding of modern human origins" (with A. Mann and J. Monge) June, 1997 Endocrine Symposium, NSF Center for Biological Timing, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, June 9. "Approaches to the identification of pulsatility in human growth data." March, 1997 “Saltatory growth” Department of Anatomy, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison. May, 1996 Invited participant, Conference on "Dental histology and the evolution of human growth" College de France and Foundation Singer-Poulignac, Paris. March, 1996 Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama, Guatemala City. "Saltatory growth patterns."

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November 1995 Gerber Corporation, Fremont, Michigan. New Science Lecture, Research and Development. "Growth spurts in infancy and childhood." May, 1995. 22me Colloque des Anthropologistes de Langue Francaise. Brussels, Belgium. "Les dynamiques de la croissance saltatoire: une base adaptative chez l'homme." November, 1994. Pennsylvania State University. Conference on Nonlinear Dynamical Systems, "Saltatory growth as an example of nonlinear dynamics." April, 1994. Society for Research in Human Milk and Lactation. Anaheim, CA. FASEB Symposium: "Growth and Development," “Saltatory growth during infancy.” February, 1994. Wyeth Laboratories. Philadelphia. "Saltatory growth and the implications for variability in nutritional intake" November, 1993. NICHD, Rockville, MD. Workshop on "Dynamical systems methods for the study of interactions of genes and environment," “Saltatory growth.” August, 1993. Laboratory of Nutrition, Royal College of Veterinary Science, Copenhagen, Denmark, “Saltatory growth.” March, 1993 Department of International Nutrition, Cornell University, “Saltatory Growth.” March, 1993 2nd National Collaborative Growth Study Conference. New York City. “Human growth by saltation and stasis.” December, 1992. World Health Organization subcommittee on infant growth, Cornell University. Other Papers Presented at Professional Meetings 2012 Dupree L, Ingalls D, Welkley J, Lampl M. Engaging and empowering college students to

develop healthy lifestyle behaviors. 22nd annual Art and Science of Health Promotion, April 11-13, San Diego, California. (poster)

2006 Thompson AL, Lampl M “Changing views of baby fat: biological and cultural meanings of

body weight and composition” 106th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. San Jose, California.

2006 Lampl M, “Saltatory growth biology, dynamic systems and selection,” Joint AAPA/HBA:

Anchorage, Alaska (March 10, 2006). 2004 104th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Co-organized (with

EA Quinn) Symposium, “What’s on the Menu: Science and ritual in everyday eating behaviors.”

2004 “Nibbling, gorging and growing.” 104th Annual meeting of the American

Anthropological Association. Symposium, “What’s on the Menu: Science and ritual in everyday eating behaviors.”

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2004 “All grown up…and sick?” 104th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Symposium, “What’s on the Menu: Science and ritual in everyday eating behaviors” (Quinn, EA, Lampl M.)

2004 Xth International Congress of Auxology. July 4-7, 2004, Florence, Italy. Synchronicity

and time lagged relationships in serial infant growth data (Lampl M, Johnson ML). Xth International Congress of Auxology. July 4-7, 2004, Florence, Italy. Bone growth

(elongation) occurs during recumbency and not during standing/ambulation as documented in a lamb model, (Wilsman NJ, Farnum CE, Leiferman EM, Noonan K, Markel MD, Lampl M).

Xth International Congress of Auxology. July 4-7, 2004, Florence, Italy. Infant illness and the inherent risk of common events during the first year of life (Quinn EA, Lampl M). Xth International Congress of Auxology. July 4-7, 2004, Florence, Italy, Sex differences in body composition with weight growth patterns in infancy. (Thompson AL, Lampl M).

2002 30th Anniversary Combined Meeting of the National Sickle Cell Disease Program and the

Sickle Cell Disease Association of America September 17-21, 2002 Washington, DC “Parent Assessment Of Risk In Sickle Cell Hydroxyurea Treatment” (Meyappan JD, Lampl M, L Hsu).

2002 102nd Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Co-organized (with

Yaya Ren) Symposium, “(UN)Imagined Persons: Cultural, biological and legal epistemologies of the fetus.”

2002 “The biocultural gap in fetal developments.” 102nd Annual meeting of the American

Anthropological Association, Symposium, “(UN)Imagined Persons: Cultural, biological and legal epistemologies of the fetus.”

1997 96th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Washington DC.

“Male gender and health: Biological perspectives reconsidered” (Lampl M, Smith EO) For the symposium, Anthropological Approaches to Male Gender, Health, and the Mortality Gap.

1996 95th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. November 20-24, San

Francisco. Symposium, "Biological anthropology as anthropology: A critical retrospective" (Lampl M, Worthman C), "Human development: Old solutions, new questions."

1996 95th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. November 20-24, San

Francisco. Symposium, "The evolution of the ontogeny of enculturation" (Mann AE, Monge JM, Lampl M) "Childhood in human evolution: socialization and the maturational rubicon."

1996 10th Congress of the European Anthropological Association, Brussels, Belgium. "Saltatory growth and illness: Evidence for bidirectionality." 10th Congress of the European Anthropological Association. Brussels. Poster. Methods

for the identification of saltation and stasis in human growth data. (Johnson ML, Lampl M).

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10th Congress of the European Anthropological Association. Variations in the dental enamel of Neandertals and modern humans. (Mann AE, Lampl M, Monge J).

1994 Seventh International Congress of Auxology, Szombathely, Hungary. "Saltatory growth." 1994 Society for Research in Biological Rhythms. Amelia Island, Florida."Preliminary observations on biological rhythms and saltatory growth" (Lampl M, Johnson ML, P Jeanty). 1994 American Association for the Advancement of Science. San Francisco. Poster,

"Nutritional intake and eating behavior in inner city children" (Lampl M, Roberts J). 1993 21eme Colloque des anthropologistes de langue francaise, "Croissance et veillesement". Bordeaux, France, "La croissance par pousse et paliers". 1992 Eighth Congress of the European Anthropological Association. Madrid. "Growth and development perspectives on the study of fossil and skeletal samples of children" (Lampl M, Johnston FE). 1992 Ninth International Symposium on Dental Morphology. Florence.

"New information on the microstructure of neandertal and modern European teeth (Mann AE, Lampl M, JM Monge)

1992 Society for Research in Biological Rhythms, Amelia Island, Fla. "Evidence for saltatory human growth" (Lampl M , Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML). 1992 American Association for the Advancement of Science, Chicago. "Saltatory human

growth," in symposium, "Human Growth Patterns." 1991 Sixth International Congress of Auxology, Madrid, Spain "New method for the analysis of

saltatory growth in infancy" (Lampl M, Veldhuis JD, Johnson ML). 1983 Society for Research in Child Development, Detroit. "Episodic growth and behavioral development." 1982 Third International Congress of Auxology, Brussels. "Episodic growth in infancy." Grants and Awards (not inclusive of dissertation improvement grants):

2006 The Carver School Project: Outreach Atlanta Co-investigator. Marstellar, Pat, PI “Research in Individual and Community Health” (RICH) Research Team for Healthy Kids Atlanta. Arthur M Blank Foundation. ($1,597,000.00)

2006 Early Infancy Predictive Health Modeling: Biological Marker Extraction, Identification, Projection. Robert H Woodruff Funds.

2005 Emory University Seed Fund. Development of noninvasive methods for prospective study of infant

2004 Emory University Quadrangle Fund. Protocol development for non-invasive endocrine measures during infancy.

1998 Emory University Fund for Internationalization. Developed and implemented a field school for Masters’ students in international health in Antigua, Guatemala

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during the summer of 1998. (Co-Investigator with Chair, Department of International Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory).

1997 Emory College Faculty Development Award. June-August. 1997 Emory College, Center for Teaching and Curriculum, Languages

Across the Curriculum, for course development in French. 1997 Gerber Products Company, New Directions Science Award, for research,

“Surges in food intake and growth pulses.” 1996 Gerber Foundation, funds for the Emory University Human Growth Workshop '96. 1996 Emory Center for Teaching and Curriculum, course development.

1996 Emory College Faculty Development Award. June-August. 1995 Fourth Human Growth Workshop: Genentech Corp, Eli Lilly and

Emory College. 1995 Emory College Faculty Development Award. June- August. 1985 "Growth Spurts in Infancy" Wenner-Gren Foundation for

Anthropological Research. 1983 S.L. Washburn Prize, American Association of Physical Anthropology for lecture,

“Episodic Growth in Infancy.” 1981 "EEG Development: Continuous or discontinuous?" (with Martin Reite, M.D.) Developmental Psychobiology Research Group, The Grant Foundation. 1980 "Behavioral Development and Physical Growth during Infancy" (with R.N. Emde, M.D.) Developmental Psychobiology Research Group, The Grant Foundation. Teaching Recognition

2003 Emory Williams Award for Outstanding Teaching in the Social Sciences. Emory College, Emory University. 2000-02 Selected for Who’s Who in Teaching in America, 2000-02 2000 Honorary initiation into Phi Sigma Iota, French.

1998-99 IFC/ISC Faculty Appreciation Award, Emory University. Crystal Apple Award Nominee. Emory University. 1994-95 Crystal Apple Award Nominee. Emory University. Courses Taught Predictive health and society Introductory biological anthropology Human growth and development Biocultural aspects of human development Human evolution Medical anthropology Biomedical anthropology Defining human health: a biocultural approach Human biology Anthropological aspects of human sexuality Nutrition and human growth Demographic ecology Nutritional anthropology Physiological anthropology Methods in biological anthropology Origin of modern humans (Language Across the Curriculum, French) Histology (University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine)

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Students Trained / In Training

Ph.D. in progress: Chair, Amanda Mummert Chair, Emily Esche PhD completed:

Chair, Yaya Ren, J.D., “The neonatal intensive care unit: Culture, biology and care of the premature infant.” Ren received a Fulbright Fellowship to document NICU care in Taiwan. August 2011.

Chair, Amanda Thompson, “More than just birth weight: a longitudinal study of the reproductive ecology of infant growth and development” Ph.D., M.P.H., August 2007. Thompson is assistant professor of anthropology and research scientist at the Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Co-chair (with Peter Brown), Melissa Melby, “Biocultural approaches to the study of the local biology of menopause in Japan.” Ph.D. May, 2007. Melby is an Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Delaware after serving 5 years as associate director, the National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Tokyo, Japan.

Chair, Christopher Kuzawa, PhD, MSc “Maternal nutrition, fetal growth, and cardiovascular risk in Filipino adolescents” 2001. Kuzawa won the outstanding student award from the following associations for this work: Human Biology Association, American Association of Physical Anthropologists, the Nutrition Society. He is an Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University.

Committee member, Theodore Schurr, PhD, (Chair, Doug Wallace, Ph.D.). “mt-DNA and the Origins of Native American Populations” Ph.D. completed 1998. Schurr is an Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania.

Committee Member, Jun Hu, M.D., Ph.D. (Chair, Melvin Konner, M.D., Ph.D.), “Medical beliefs and behavior of Hmong Vietnamese immigrants in the United States.” Ph.D. completed 2000. This work was published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Hu practices academic medicine in China.

Committee member, Diana Smay Toebbe, (Chair, George Armelagos, Ph.D.) “Health indicators in the skeletal population of Hasanlu.”

Undergraduate research projects directed: selected

Sharon Rikin, Emory College 2005. “Infant urinary cortisol patterns” Competitively achieved funding for undergraduate research, first place, SURE Summer Research Program, Emory College.

Nidhi Jain, Emory College 2005. “Midwives in the US and UK,” competitively achieved funding for undergraduate research. Jain attends the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Julia Kent, Emory College 2004. “Maternal perceptions of infant feeding needs,” competitively achieved funding for undergraduate research. Kent works for CARE.

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Kylea Liese, Emory College 2002. “Widows and AIDS among the Luo (Kenya): Public Health Implications of HIV intervention programs,” competitively achieved funding for undergraduate research. Liese is completing a PhD in Anthropology at Stanford University.

Janeki Meyappan, M.D. Emory College 2001. “Sickle cell anemia: Parental decision making in novel treatment advances.” This work was presented at national medical meetings and Meyappan was the national honor society in anthropology, Lambda Alpha, prize winner for best work by an undergraduate anthropology major with this research, as well as the Emory College Shostak Prize.

Kourtney Kuss, Emory College 2000. “Parental beliefs and practices coping with children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorders.” Continued to medical school.

Co-chair, Jesse Evert, Emory College 2000. “Needle exchange programs and AIDS in Australia” Medical student, Case Western Reserve, class of 2005. This work received press on NPR.

Cassandra Quave, PhD. Emory College 1999. “Indigenous healing practices in Peru.”

Andrea Kowalsky, “Maternal beliefs and practices regarding breastfeeding in Costa Rica,” competitively achieved undergraduate research funds. Emory College, 2000; M.P.H. , Tulane, 2001.

Other Professional Activities: Consultancy 2010 Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Infant growth protocol, IFED. 2002-03 The National Children’s Health Study, NICHD. Consultant, protocol development for the infant growth component of the study. Proposed measurement design and rationale. December 2002. 1999 Gerber Products Company. Consultant for the relationship between growth and

nutritional needs during infancy. Appeared in Current Practices in Infant Feeding. Chapter 6, Growth Issues.

1999-04 Consultant, “The Hypertrophic Chondrocyte and its Pericellular Matrix”, Norman Wilsman and Cornelia Farnum, co-PI. NIH, 1999-2004. 1999 Growth studies, Department of Pediatrics, Hospital Garrahan, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Consultant to Dr. Horaccio Lejarraga and the Department of Pediatrics concerning project development and protocol for the investigation of infant growth. 1995 Consultant to Gerber research and development and marketing management. Recommended expanding the corporate positioning to feature Gerber’s commitment to applying nutritional science and infant growth to its products and service. 1993-5 Protocol development, study implementation: Child health and nutrition in a science

mentoring community. Jean Roberts, PI, Director, PENNlincs Science Mentoring Program (NSF funded).

Editorial Board and Reviewer Activities: American Journal of Human Biology, 1997-; reviewer for American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology, Biomed Pediatrics, Child Development, Genetics in Medicine, Early Human Development, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Economics and Human Biology, , Annals of Human Biology, Springer-Verlag, Macarthur Foundation, National Science Foundation, National Geographic, Parents Magazine, Pediatrics, PLoS Genetics Conferences/Symposia Organized:

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2011 Post-graduate course on "Fetal Programming" co-organized with David Barker, held at

Emory University. 2010 Co-organizer with Karen Adolph, "Growth in Development" for the Winter Conference of the International Society for Developmental Psychobiology. 2005-10 Organizing committee, Annual Predictive Health Symposia, Emory University. 2004 104th Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Co-organized (with

EA Quinn) Symposium, “What’s on the Menu: Science and ritual in everyday eating behaviors.”

2002 102nd Annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association. Co-organized (with Y Ren) Symposium, “(UN)Imagined Persons: Cultural, biological and legal

epistemologies of the fetus.” 1991-99 Annual Human Growth Workshops, University of Pennsylvania, Emory University 1997 Member, Scientific Organizing Committee, Fifth International Auxology Congress,

Philadelphia 1992 Symposium on "Human Growth Patterns," Annual Meeting, American Association for the

Advancement of Science, Chicago. First Human Growth Workshop, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

1990 Co-Organized (with N Minugh-Purvis) Symposium on "Ontogeny and Phylogeny," 60th Annual Meeting, American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Miami, 1990.

Professional Associations and Committees American Anthropological Association 1982- American Association for the Advancement of Science 1982- American Association of Physical Anthropologists 1982-90 Human Biology Council 1990- 1993-5 Representative to the AAAS 1995-6 Nominations and Elections Committee Society for Applied Anthropology 1994-99 Society for Research in Child Development 1983- Society for the Study of Human Biology 1994- European Anthropological Association 1995-7 University Positions

2008-11 Lecturer Track Tenure and Promotion Committee 2007 Committee to hire the Executive Vice President of Emory Health Sciences

Center 2007- Advisory board, Medicine and the Humanities 2006- Advisory board, PRISM Science Education 2006-07 Member, Science Distinction Hire Committee 2005 Strategic Theme Co-chair (Kenneth Brigham, School of Medicine), Predictive Health. 2005 Sub-committee, "Being a Doctor", Emory School of Medicine (Curriculum revision). 2001-2 Co-Chair, with Provost. Emory University Strategic Planning Committee, Strategic Planning for the Arts and Sciences. At the request of the President, the committee was convened to review Emory’s institutional structures in the Arts & Sciences and form

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recommendations. The committee consisted of representatives from the administration (Deans of the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences), and faculty members from across the University. This committee collected data from administration and faculty from the Schools of Medicine, Law, Business, Theology, Public Health and Arts and Sciences regarding the present partitioning of responsibilities and finances. Comparative data were collected from institutions of comparable size and ranking for consideration in these deliberations. The report was delivered to the President in the summer of 2002. 2001-3 Research at Emory Commission. Co-Chair, Subcommittee for the Assessment of Faculty Representation. Presidential Committee convened to assess the status of research at Emory. This commission was a needs’ assessment group, with subcommittees responsible for data collection on faculty opinions and experiences in the research environment created at the University. Data were gathered from comparable universities and the working group aimed to recommend changes that would further the research initiatives and success of the Emory faculty. A working report was submitted to the faculty and President in the spring of 2003. 2004-7 Faculty Governance Committee 2004-5 University Advisory Council for Teaching 2004-5 Honors Council Faculty Advisor

2004 Selection committee for Woodruff Fellowships, Graduate School Selection committee for Emory Minority Graduate Fellowship Grievance Committee, Graduate School

2003-7 Contributing lecturer, NIH-required ethics course, Graduate school 2003-4 Member, University Research Committee, Social Sciences 2003 Member, Selection committee for Woodruff Fellowships, GSAS 2000-4 Contributing lecturer, Tatto Graduate School 2001-2 Co-Chair, Emory University Strategic Planning Committee, Strategic Planning for the Arts and Sciences. 2001-3 Research at Emory Commission. Co-Chair, Subcommittee for the Assessment of Faculty Representation. 2000-04 Selection committee for Emory Minority Graduate Fellowship 2000-03 Member, Emory Scholars Selection Committee, Emory College 1999 Grievance committee, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Emory University Hiring committee for faculty at the School of Nursing, Emory University Hiring committee for Director of Research and Technology, Emory University 1998 Benchmark committee for admissions. Emory School of Medicine

1997 Woodruff Fellowship Committee, Emory University 1998 Graduate School Committee for Internationalization in graduate research 1996-2001 Executive Council, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Department 2006 Chair, committee to-hire, Medical Anthropology 2004 Committee to-hire, Biological anthropology 2004 Spring. Acting Director of Graduate Studies

2003 Member, Undergraduate Concerns Committee 2003 Member, Department Grievance Committee

2002 Chair, Graduate Admissions Member, Graduate Concerns Committee.

2000 Member, Department of Anthropology IRB 2002 Hiring committee, Medical anthropology

2000 Chair, Graduate Admissions

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1997-2000 Director of Undergraduate Studies, Department of Anthropology Re-organized the undergraduate curriculum and Honors Program. 1995, 1997-2000 Member, Executive committee, Department of Anthropology 1995-1997 Co-Organizer, Lecture series, Department of Anthropology 1995-1996 Member, Graduate Concerns Committee, Department of Anthropology Member, Graduate Admissions committee Hiring committee, Biological anthropology Media and Broadcast Experience

National Press Club on behalf of Emory University Predictive Health

Co-Organizer, Professor: Distance Learning for University of Pennsylvania, College of General Studies. The PennAdvance Program with Sylvan Learning Center presented a semester long weekly live broadcast, interactive classroom that reached high school students simultaneously in six cities across the United States. The class included live interaction through televised transmission.

Expert consultant to daytime talk show, film footage for Japanese broadcasting company on human growth.

Live radio interviews: BBC, CBC, PBS, American Foreign Service.

Interviews with television reporters for coverage of saltatory growth, growth spurts; broadcast on ABC News with Peter Jennings and the CBS Sunday Morning Report.

Interviews with written journalists; subsequent coverage in the Washington Post, New York Times and USA Today, Science News and Parents Magazine, among others.

Children’s growth experiences, Scholastic Magazine

Consultant, BrightHouse