Emily M. Chester
Neuroscience · Indiana University
Publications
25
Citations
200
Est. group size
—
Recurring co-author estimate
Active years
18
Publishing since 2009
Emily M. Chester conducts research at the intersection of neuroscience, human biology, and behavior, studying how physiological stress responses, immune function, and hormones relate to growth, health, and behavioral outcomes. Her work spans human populations (such as adolescents in high-altitude environments) and animal models, examining topics like maternal immunization effects on offspring and behavioral indicators of working-animal performance.
Publication activity has been steady over the past decade, averaging around two papers per year with a modest recent increase in 2024 and 2025.
Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026
- Behavioral components define operational suitability metric for detection dog success
Auburn University Scholarly Repository · 2026
- C‐reactive protein (CRP) in high altitude <scp>Bolivian</scp> peri‐urban adolescents varies by adiposity, current illness, height, socioeconomic status, sex, and menarcheal status: The potential benefits and costs of adipose reserves in arduous environments
American Journal of Human Biology · 2024
- Reproductive maturation, human
The International Encyclopedia of Biological Anthropology · 2018
- Obsessive-Compulsive Ir/rationality in Watt
Samuel Beckett Today / Aujourd’hui · 2017
- <i>Beckett and Animals</i>, edited by Mary Bryden, and Joseph Anderton's<i>Beckett's Creatures: Art of Failure after the Holocaust</i>
Journal of Beckett Studies · 2017
- Timing of Maternal Immunization Affects Immunological and Behavioral Outcomes of Adult Offspring in Siberian Hamsters (<i>Phodopus sungorus</i>)
Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A Ecological Genetics and Physiology · 2016
- Journal of Visualized Experiments×2
- Journal of Adolescent Health×1
- General and Comparative Endocrinology×1
- Biology Letters×1
- Evolution Medicine and Public Health×1
This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.
Last updated Jul 11, 2026.
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