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is a graduate student in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University.
I am a graduate student in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University where I study questions at the intersection of ecology, behaviour, and evolution in lizards. Specifically, I'm interested in how individual variation in lizards' movement patterns and habitat use influences their social, ecological, and reproductive interactions. I'm also keenly interested in the basic biology of understudied and underappreciated organisms, in communicating science to broad audiences, and in fostering inclusivity in academia.
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Ambika Kamath
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Authored by
Ambika Kamath
March 15, 2017
Our Assumptions Influence the "Facts" About Sexual Behavior: The Curious Case of Jerry Coyne, Holly Dunsworth, and Anolis Lizards
The hypotheses that get tested do not emerge from a vacuum. All hypotheses emerge from assumptions, whether we recognize them or not.