183:. That job allowed Frisancho to develop an interest in anthropology and expand his linguistic skills and become fluent in multiple languages (including Spanish, Quechua, English, French and Portuguese). Later in 1962 he graduated with a Bachelor in Humanities from the National University of San Antonio Abad of Cusco, PerĂș. Upon graduating, he married Hedy G. Moscoso and had two sons, Roberto Javier and Juan Frisancho. In 1963 he won a Fulbright fellowship and went to Pennsylvania State University to study biological anthropology. During that time, he cultivated his interest in physiological, cultural, and developmental adaptations to extreme environments such as high altitude, cold, heath, under-nutrition and over-nutrition.
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of the
National University of San Antonio Abad of Cusco, PerĂș and in April 2008 received the Franz Boas Distinguished Achievement Award from the American Human Biology Association. In 2013, he received the Charles Darwin Lifetime Achievement Award bestowed by the American Association of Physical Anthropologists.
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He was the recipient of the LS&A Excellence in
Education Award in 1996, 1997, and 1998, and the Amoco Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award in 1997. In 1999 he was named the Arthur A. Thurnau Professor of Anthropology. In June 2006, he was awarded the title of Honorary Professor of Anthropology
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His research interest focuses on the connection between biology, evolution and culture in determining the expression of biological traits. His approach seeks to evaluate contemporary biological traits as byproducts of past biological adaptations both in contemporary and evolutionary perspective. He
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and subsequently became a
Research Scientist at the University of Michigan Center for Human Growth and Development and Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the Department of Anthropology. In 1972 he was named Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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including teenage pregnancy. In 2013, he received the
Charles Darwin Lifetime Achievement Award bestowed by the American Association of Physical Anthropologists.
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is also interested in anthropometric standards for the evaluation of child and adult growth and nutritional status.
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175:Frisancho was born on February 4, 1939, in Cusco
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121:in Anthropology bestowed by the American
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132:to extreme environments such as
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319:University of Michigan faculty
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280:at the University of Michigan
197:Pennsylvania State University
278:Roberto Frisancho Biography
224:Leonard, William R (2009).
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102:and the Arthur F. Thurnau
191:In 1969, he received his
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100:biological anthropologist
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74:biological anthropologist
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309:Peruvian anthropologists
299:Physical anthropologists
112:University of Michigan
84:University of Michigan
195:in Anthropology from
96:A. Roberto Frisancho
20:A. Roberto Frisancho
127:developmental human
54:developmental human
248:10.1002/ajhb.20916
142:nutritional status
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231:Am. J. Hum. Biol.
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