Nathan E. Thompson

Nathan E. Thompson

Title: Associate Professor

Department: Anatomy

Campus: Long Island

Areas of Expertise: Functional Morphology, Paleoanthropology, Biomechanics

Education Credentials: Ph.D.

Joined New York Tech: 2016


Nathan Thompson's research focuses largely on comparative biomechanics of locomotion and the evolution of locomotion in primates, apes, and humans. In particular, his research focuses on how musculoskeletal morphology is related to locomotor performance, and what differences in the musculoskeletal system in fossil apes and humans might mean for how our early ancestors moved and interacted with their environment. Thompson's previous work has shed light on the evolution of bipedalism in humans, and how features of bones, muscles, and organs in modern humans are related to efficient bipedal walking. His research draws heavily on experimental analysis of locomotion in living primates and apes using cutting-edge 3-D methods to quantify movement both in laboratory settings and in the wild.

Thompson received his Ph.D. in Anatomical Sciences from Stony Brook University in 2016, a master's degree in Biomedical Sciences from Stony Brook University in 2013, and a bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering with a second major in Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis in 2009.

Recent Projects/Research

Publications

Courses Taught at New York Tech

Professional Honors & Awards

Contact Info

X

By continuing to use the website, you consent to analytics tracking per NYIT's Privacy Statement