Luz Patricia Hernandez, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Biological Sciences The George Washington University, Washington, DC, United States 
Website:
https://biology.columbian.gwu.edu/patricia-hernandez
Google:
"Patricia Hernandez"
Cross-listing: Biomechanics Tree

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Philip J. Motta grad student University of South Florida
 (MS)
Karel Frederik Liem grad student 1999 Harvard
 (Ph.D.: Ontogeny and scaling of feeding mechanics in the Danio clade: Overcoming sticky situations)
Stephen H. Devoto post-doc George Washington University (Neurotree)

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Allyson Evans grad student The George Washington University (Biomechanics Tree)
Matthew LeFauve grad student 2016- (Biomechanics Tree)
Kelsie Pos grad student 2019- The George Washington University (Biomechanics Tree)
Nathan C. Bird grad student 2003-2009 The George Washington University
Heather R. Whitehurst grad student 2011 The George Washington University (Biomechanics Tree)
Katie Lynn Staab grad student 2005-2011 The George Washington University
Karly E. Cohen grad student 2018 The George Washington University (Biomechanics Tree)
Matthew Kolmann post-doc 2018- The George Washington University (Evolution Tree)
Kassandra L. Ford post-doc 2022-2023 The George Washington University (Biomechanics Tree)
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Keer S, Storch JD, Nguyen S, et al. (2022) Thyroid hormone shapes craniofacial bones during postembryonic zebrafish development. Evolution & Development. 24: 61-76
Cohen KE, Crawford CH, Hernandez LP, et al. (2020) Sucker with a fat lip: The soft tissues underlying the viscoelastic grip of remora adhesion. Journal of Anatomy
Keer S, Cohen K, May C, et al. (2019) Anatomical assessment of the adult skeleton of zebrafish reared under different thyroid hormone profiles. Anatomical Record (Hoboken, N.J. : 2007)
Hernandez LP, Adriaens D, Martin CH, et al. (2017) Building trophic specializations that result in substantial niche partitioning within a young adaptive radiation. Journal of Anatomy
See more...