Adam Keith Huttenlocker
Assistant ProfessorÂ
Integrative Anatomical Sciences
Keck School of Medicine
United States of America
Biography
Dr. Huttenlocker is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Integrative Anatomical Sciences who serves as an instructor in the Years I & II Microanatomy curriculum. He received his PhD from the University of Washington in 2013 and held a National Science Foundation-funded postdoctoral fellowship in comparative vertebrate physiology at The University of Utah from 2013 to 2016. His current research uses hard-tissue histology to understand the complex origins of mammalian behavior, growth, and endothermic physiology in non-mammalian synapsids and other early tetrapods (as recorded by their fossilized bones and teeth). As a functional paleobiologist, Dr. Huttenlocker's teaching philosophy emphasizes shared patterns in vertebrate development and evolution that shed light on human and mammalian anatomy & physiology.
Research Interest
anatomy & physiology.
Publications
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Codron J, Bothaâ€Brink J, Codron D, Huttenlocker AK, Angielczyk KD. Predator–prey interactions amongst Permoâ€Triassic terrestrial vertebrates as a deterministic factor influencing faunal collapse and turnover. Journal of evolutionary biology. 2017 Jan 1;30(1):40-54.
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Huttenlocker AK, Farmer CG. Bone Microvasculature Tracks Red Blood Cell Size Diminution in Triassic Mammal and Dinosaur Forerunners. Current Biology. 2017 Jan 9;27(1):48-54.