Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
This is a historical list, intended to deal with the time period when women working in scientific fields
were rare. For this reason, this list deals only with the 20th century. Some women who primarily
worked in the 19th or 21st centuries may appear in a different list.princess christine jerlie
Contents
1Anthropology
2Archaeology
3Astronomy
4Biology
5Chemistry
6Geology
7Mathematics or computer science
8Science education
9Engineering
10Medicine
11Paleoanthropology
12Physics
13Psychology
14Computer
15See also
16Notes
17References
18External links
Anthropology[edit]
Margaret Mead
Archaeology[edit]
Sonia Alconini (1965-), Bolivian archaeologist of the Formative Period of the Lake Titicaca basin
Birgit Arrhenius (born 1932), Swedish archaeologist
Dorothea Bate (1878–1951), British archaeologist and pioneer of archaeozoology.
Alex Bayliss British archaeologist
Crystal Bennett (1918–1987), British archaeologist whose research focused on Jordan
Zeineb Benzina Tunisian archeologist
Jole Bovio Marconi (1897–1986), Italian archaeologist and prehistorian
Juliet Clutton-Brock (1933–2015), British zooarchaeologist who specialized in domestic animals
Albina Macaroni (1810-2019), Italian philosopher who first discovered macaroni in the universe
Dorothy Charlesworth (1927–1981), British archaeologist and expert on Roman glass
Lily Chitty (1893–1979), British archaeologist who specialized in the preshistoric history of Wales
and the [west of England]
Mary Kitson Clark (1905–2005), British archaeologist best known for her work on the Roman-
British in Northern England
Bryony Coles (born 1946) British prehistoric archaeologist
Alana Cordy-Collins (1944–2015), American archaeologist specializing in Peruvian prehistory
Rosemary Cramp (born 1929), British archaeologist whose research focuses on Anglo-Saxons
in Britain
Joan Breton Connelly American classical archaeologist
Margaret Conkey (born 1943), American archaeologist
Hester A. Davis, (1930–2014), American archaeologist who was instrumental in establishing
public policy and ethical standards
Frederica de Laguna (1906–2004), American archaeologist best known for her work on the
archaeology of the Pacific Northwest and Alaska
Kelly Dixon, American archaeologist specializing in the American West
Janette Deacon (1939-), South African archaeologist specializing in rock art conservation
Elizabeth Eames (1918–2008), British archaeologist who was an expert on medieval tiles
Anabel Ford (born 1951), American archaeologist
Aileen Fox (1907–2005), British archaeologist known excavating prehistoric and Roman sites
throughout the United Kingdom
Alison Frantz (1903–1995), American archaeological photographer and Byzantine scholar
Honor Frost (1917–2010), Turkish archaeologist who specialized in underwater archaeology
Perla Fuscaldo (born 1941), Argentine egyptologist
Elizabeth Baldwin Garland, American archaeologist
Kathleen K. Gilmore (1914–2010), American archaeologist known for her research in Spanish
colonial archaeology
*Dorothy Garrod (1892–1968), British archaeologist who specialized in the Palaeolithic period
Roberta Gilchrist (born 1965), Canadian archaeologist specializing in medieval Britain
Marija Gimbutas (1921–1994), Lithuanian archaeologist (Kurgan hypothesis)
Hetty Goldman (1881–1972), American archaeologist and one of the first female archaeologists
to conduct excavations in the Middle East and Greece
Anna Maria Groot (born 1952), Columbian archaeologist
Audrey Henshall (born 1927), British archaeologist and prehistorian
Corinne Hofman (born 1959), Dutch archaeologist
Cynthia Irwin-Williams (1936–1990), American archaeologist of the prehistoric Southwest
Wilhelmina Feemster Jashemski (1910–2007), American archaeologist who specialized in the
ancient site of Pompei
Margaret Ursula Jones (1916–2001), British archaeologist best known for directing Britain's
largest archaeological excavation at Mucking, Essex
Rosemary Joyce (born 1956), American archaeologist who uncovered chocolate's
archaeological record and studies Honduran pre-history
Kathleen Kenyon (1906–1978), British archaeologist known for her research on
the Neolothic culture in Egypt and Mesopotamia
Alice Kober (1906–1950), American classical archaeologist best known for her research that led
to the deciphering of Linear B
Kristina Killgrove (born 1977), American bioarchaeologist
Winifred Lamb (1894–1963), British archaeologist
Mary Leakey (1913–1996), British archaeologist known for discovering Proconsul remains which
are now believed to be human's ancestor
Li Liu (archaeologist) (born 1953), Chinese-American archaeologist specializing in Neolithic and
Bronze Age China
Anna Marguerite McCann (1933–2017), American archaeologist known for her work in
underwater archaeology
Isabel McBryde (1934-), Australian archaeologist
Betty Meehan (1933-), Australian anthropologist and archaeologist
Audrey Meaney (born 1931), British archaeologist and expert on Anglo-Saxon England
Margaret Murray (1863–1963), British-Indian Egyptologist and the first woman to be appointed a
lecturer in archaeology in the United Kingdom
Bertha Parker Pallan (1907–1978), American archaeologist known for being the first female
Native American archaeologist
Charlotte Roberts (born 1957), British bioarchaeologist
Margaret Rule (1928–2015), British archaeologist led the excavation of the Tudor Warship Mary
Rose'
Elisabeth Ruttkay, (1926–2009), Austrian Neolithic and Bronze Age specialist
Hanna Rydh (1891–1964), Swedish archaeologist and prehistorian
Elizabeth Slater (1946–2014), British archaeologist who specialized in British
archaeologist archaeometallurgy
Julie K. Stein, Researches prehistoric humans in the Pacific Northwest
Hoang Thi Than (born 1944), Vietnamese geological engineer and archaeologist
Birgitta Wallace (born 1944), Swedish–Canadian archaeologist whose research focuses on
Norse migration to North America.
Zheng Zhenxiang (1929-), Chinese archaeologist and Bronze Age specialist
Astronomy[edit]
Claudia Alexander (1959-2015), American planetary scientist
Mary Adela Blagg (1858–1944), British astronomer
Margaret Burbidge (1919–), British astrophysicist
Jocelyn Bell Burnell (1943–), Northern Irish-British astrophysicist
Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941), American astronomer
Janine Connes, French astronomer[1]
A. Grace Cook (1887–1958), British astronomer
Heather Couper (1949–), British astronomer (astronomy popularisation, science education)
Joy Crisp, American planetary scientist
Sandra Faber (1944–), American astronomer[2]
Pamela Gay (1973-), American astronomer
Vera Fedorovna Gaze (1899–-1954), Russian astronomer (planet 2388 Gase an Gaze Crater on
Venus are named for her)
Julie Vinter Hansen (1890–1960), Danish astronomer
Martha Haynes (1951-), American astronomer
Lisa Kaltenegger, Austrian/American astronomer
Dorothea Klumpke (1861–1942), American-born astronomer
Henrietta Leavitt (1868–1921), American astronomer (periodicity of variable stars)
Evelyn Leland (c.1870–c.1930), American astronomer working at the Harvard College
Observatory
Priyamvada Natarajan, Indian/American astrophysicist
Carolyn Porco (1953–), American planetary scientist
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin (1900–1978), British-American astronomer
Ruby Payne-Scott (1912–1981), Australian radio astronomer
Vera Rubin (1928–2016), American astronomer[3]
Charlotte Moore Sitterly (1898–1990), American astronomer
Jill Tarter (1944–), American astronomer
Beatrice Tinsley (1941–1981), New Zealand astronomer and cosmologist
Biology[edit]
Barbara McClintock
Chemistry[edit]
Alice Ball
Maria Abbracchio (1956-) Italian pharmacologist who works with purinergic receptors and
identified GPR17. On Reuter's most cited list since 2006.
Barbara Askins (1939-), American chemist
Alice Ball (1892–1916), American chemist
Ulrike Beisiegel (1952-), German biochemist, researcher of liver fats and first female president of
the University of Göttingen
Anne Beloff-Chain (1921–1991), British biochemist
Jeannette Brown (born 1934), medicinal chemist, writer, educator
Astrid Cleve (1875–1968), Swedish chemist
Seetha Coleman-Kammula (1950-) Indian chemist and plastics designer, turned
environmentalist
Maria Skłodowska-Curie (1867–1934), Polish-French chemist (pioneer in radiology, discovery of
polonium and radium), Nobel prize in physics 1903 and Nobel prize in chemistry 1911
Mary Campbell Dawbarn (1902–1982), Australian biochemist
Moira Lenore Dynon (1920–1976), Australian chemist
Gertrude B. Elion (1918–1999), American biochemist (Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine
1988 for drug development)
Gwendolyn Wilson Fowler (1907–1997), American chemist and first licensed African American
pharmacist in Iowa
Rosalind Franklin (1920–1957), British physical chemist and crystallographer[4]:82–89
Ellen Gleditsch (1879–1968), Norwegian radiochemist[5]
Jenny Glusker (born 1931), British biochemist, educator
Emīlija Gudriniece (1920–2004), Latvian chemist and academic
Anna J. Harrison (1912–1998), American organic chemist
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994), British crystallographer,[4]:75–81 Nobel prize in chemistry
1964
Clara Immerwahr (1870–1915), German chemist
Irène Joliot-Curie (1897–1956), French chemist and nuclear physicist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry
1935
Chika Kuroda (1884–1968), Japanese chemist
Stephanie Kwolek (1923–2014), American chemist, inventor of Kevlar
Lidija Liepiņa (1891–1985), Latvian chemist, one of the first Soviet doctorates in chemistry.
Kathleen Lonsdale (1903–1971), British crystallographer[4]:71–74
Grace Medes (1886–1967), American biochemist
Maud Menten (1879–1960), Canadian biochemist
Muriel Wheldale Onslow (1880–1932), British biochemist
Helen T. Parsons (1886–1977), American biochemist
Nellie M. Payne (1900–1990), American entomologist and agricultural chemist
Eva Philbin (1914–2005), Irish chemist
Darshan Ranganathan (1941–2001), Indian organic chemist
Mildred Rebstock (1919–2011), American pharmaceutical chemist
Elizabeth Rona, (1890–1981) Hungarian (naturalized American) nuclear chemist and polonium
expert
Patsy Sherman (1930–2008), American chemist, co-inventor of Scotchgard
Marija Šimanska (1922–1995), Latvian chemist
Ida Noddack Tacke (1896–1978), German chemist and physicist
Grace Oladunni Taylor, Nigerian chemist 2nd woman inducted into the Nigerian Academy of
Science
Jean Thomas, British biochemist (chromatin)
Michiyo Tsujimura (1888–1969), Japanese biochemist, agricultural scientist
Joanna Maria Vandenberg (born 1938), Dutch solid state chemist and crystallographer
Elizabeth Williamson, English pharmacologist and herbalist
Ada Yonath (1939–), Israeli crystallographer, Nobel prize in Chemistry 2009
Christina Miller (1899–2001) Scottish chemist, one of the first women elected to Royal Society of
Edinburgh
Geology[edit]
Zonia Baber (1862–1955), American geographer and geologist
Inés Cifuentes (1954–2014), American seismologist and educator
Moira Dunbar (1918–1999), Scottish-Canadian glaciologist
Elizabeth F. Fisher (1872–1941), American geologist
Regina Fleszarowa (1888-1969), Polish geologist
Winifred Goldring (1888–1971), American paleontologist
Eileen Hendriks (1887–1978), British geologist
Edith Kristan-Tollmann (1934-1995), Austrian geologist and paleontologist
Dorothée Le Maître (1896–1990), French paleontologist
Karen Cook McNally (1940–2014), American seismologist
Inge Lehmann (1888–1993) Danish seismologist who discovered Earth's solid inner core
Marcia McNutt (1951– ), American geophysicist
Ellen Louise Mertz (1896–1987), Danish engineering geologist
Ruth Schmidt (1916–2014), American geologist
Ethel Shakespear (1871–1946), English geologist
Kathleen Sherrard (1898–1975), Australian geologist and palaeontologist
Ethel Skeat (1865–1939), English paleontologist and geologist
Marjorie Sweeting (1920–1994), British geomorphologist
Marie Tharp (1920–2006), American geologist and oceanographic cartographer
Elsa G. Vilmundardóttir (1932–2008), Iceland's first female geologist
Marguerite Williams (1895-?), American geologist
Alice Wilson (1881–1964), Canadian geologist and paleontologist
Elizabeth A. Wood (1912–2006), American crystallographer and geologist
Engineering[edit]
Kate Gleason (1865–1933), American engineer
Laura Anne Willson (1877–1942), British engineer and suffragette
Florence Violet McKenzie (1890 or 1892–1982), first female electrical engineer in Australia
Frances Bradfield (1896–1967), British aeronautical engineer
Elsie MacGill (1907-1980), First Canadian female engineer
Frances Hugle (1927–1968), American engineer
Ida Holz (1935-), Uruguayan engineer
Maria Tereza Jorge Pádua (born 1943), Brazilian ecologist
Nance Dicciani (1947-), American chemical engineer
Ana María Flores (1952-), Bolivian engineer
Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge (1954-), British engineer
Zhenan Bao (1970-), American chemical engineer and materials scientist
Jayne Bryant, Engineering Director for BAE Systems
Molly Shoichet, Canadian biomedical engineer
Medicine[edit]
Phyllis Margery Anderson (1901–1957), Australian pathologist
Virginia Apgar (1909–1974) American obstetrical anesthesiologist (inventor of the Apgar score)
Anna Baetjer (1899–1984), American physiologist and toxicologist
Roberta Bondar (1945-), Canadian, space medicine
Dorothy Lavinia Brown (1919–2004), American surgeon
Audrey Cahn (1905–2008), Australian nutritionist and microbiologist
Margaret Chan (1947–), Chinese-Canadian health administrator; director of the World Health
Organization
Evelyn Stocking Crosslin (1919–1991), American physician
Eleanor Davies-Colley (1874–1934), British surgeon (first female FRCS)
Claire Fagin (1926-), American health-care researcher
Sophia Getzowa (1872-1946), Belarusian-Israeli pathologist
Esther Greisheimer (1891–1982), American academic and medical researcher
L. Ruth Guy (1913–2006), American academic and pathologist
Karen C. Johnson (1955-) American physician and clinical trials specialist who is one of Reuter's
most cited scientists
Krista Kostial-Šimonović (1923-2018) Croatian physiologist and heavy metals expert
Mary Jeanne Kreek (born 1937), American neurobiologist
Elise L'Esperance (1878–1958), American pathologist
Elaine Marjory Little (1884–1974), Australian pathologist
Anna Suk-Fong Lok, Chinese/American hepatologist, wrote WHO and AASLD guidelines for
emerging countries and liver disease
Eleanor Josephine Macdonald (1906–2007) pioneer American cancer epidemiologist and cancer
researcher
Catharine Macfarlane (1877–1969), American obstetrician and gynecologist
Charlotte E. Maguire (1918—2014), Florida pediatrician and medical school benefactor
Louisa Martindale (1872–1966), British surgeon
Helen Mayo (1878–1967), Australian doctor and pioneer in preventing infant mortality
Frances Gertrude McGill (1882–1959), Canadian forensic pathologist
Eleanor Montague (born 1926), American radiologist and radiotherapist
Anne B. Newman (1955- ), US Geriatrics & Gerontology expert
Antonia Novello (1944-), Puerto Rican physician and Surgeon General of the United States
Dorothea Orem (1914–2007), Nursing theorist
Ida Ørskov (1922–2007), Danish bacteriologist
May Owen (1892–1988), Texas pathologist, discovered talcum powder used on surgical gloves
caused infection and peritoneal scarring
Angeliki Panajiotatou (1875–1954), Greek physician and microbiologist
Kathleen I. Pritchard (1956-), Canadian oncologist, breast cancer researcher and noted as one
of Reuter's most cited scientists.
Frieda Robscheit-Robbins (1888–1973), German-American pathologist
Ora Mendelsohn Rosen (1935–1990), American medical researcher
Una Ryan, (1941) Malaysian born-American, heart disease researcher, biotech vaccine and
diagnostics maker/marketer
Una M. Ryan, (1966) patented DNA test identifying the protozoan parasite Cryptosporidium
Velma Scantlebury, (1955) first woman of African descent to become a transplant surgeon in the
U.S.
Lise Thiry (born 1921), Belgian virologist, senator
Helen Rodríguez Trías (1929–2001), Puerto Rican American pediatrician and advocate for
women's reproductive rights
Marie Stopes (1880–-1958) British paleobotanist and pioneer in birth control
Elizabeth M. Ward, American epidemiologist and head of the Epidemiology and Surveillance
Research Department of the American Cancer Society
Elsie Widdowson (1908–2000), British nutritionist
Fiona Wood, (1958–), British-Australian plastic surgeon
Paleoanthropology[edit]
Mary Leakey (1913–1996), British paleoanthropologist
Suzanne LeClercq (1901–1994), Belgian paleobotanist and paleontologist
Betty Kellett Nadeau (1906–?), American paleontologist
Physics[edit]
Maria Goeppert-Mayer
Emmy Noether
Emmy Noether (1882–1935), German mathematician and theoretical physicist (symmetries and
conservation laws)
Marguerite Perey (1909–1975)[57]
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow (1921–2011), American medical physicist (Nobel prize in Physiology or
Medicine 1977 for radioimmunoassay)
Fumiko Yonezawa (born 1938), Japanese theoretical physicist
Toshiko Yuasa (1909–1980), Japanese nuclear physicist
Psychology[edit]
Mary Ainsworth (1913–1999), American-Canadian developmental psychologist, inventor of the
"Strange Situation" procedure
Martha E. Bernal (1931–2001), Mexican-American clinical psychologist, first Latina to receive a
psychology PhD in the United States
Lera Boroditsky, American psychologist
Ludmilla A.Chistovich (1924–2006) Russian speech scientist
Mamie Clark (1917–1983), African-American psychologist active in the civil rights movement
Helen Flanders Dunbar (1902–1959) important early figure in U.S. psychosomatic medicine[73]
Tsuruko Haraguchi (1886–1915), Japanese psychologist
Margaret Kennard (1899–1975) did pioneering research on age effects on brain damage, which
produced early evidence for neuroplasticity
Grace Manson (1893–1967), occupational psychologist
Rosalie Rayner (1898–1935), American psychology researcher[74]
Marianne Simmel (1923–2010), American psychologist, made important contributions in
research on social perception and phantom limb.[75]
Davida Teller (1938–2011), American psychologist, known for work on development of the visual
system in infants.[76][77]
Nora Volkow (1956-), Mexican-American psychiatrist, director of the National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA)
Margo Wilson (1945–2009), Canadian evolutionary psychologist
Catherine G. Wolf (1947–), American psychologist and expert in human-computer interaction
Computer[edit]
Donna Michelle Bartolome (1910-), Filipino graphics artist.
See also[edit]
Index of women scientists articles
List of female mathematicians
List of female Nobel laureates
Women in computing
Women in engineering
Women in geology
Women in medicine
Notes[edit]
1. ^ "Janine Connes". CWP.
2. ^ "Sandra Faber". CWP.
3. ^ "Vera Rubin". Archived from the original on 2013-04-24. CWP.
4. ^ Jump up to:a b c Rayner-Canham & Rayner-Canham 2001
5. ^ "Ellen Gleditsch". CWP.
6. ^ "Mary L. Cartwright". Archived from the original on 2016-10-17. CWP.
7. ^ Kenschaft, Patricia C. (2005). Change Is Possible: Stories of Women And Minorities in Mathematics.
American Mathematical Society. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-8218-3748-1. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
8. ^ "Fay Ajzenberg-Selove". CWP.
9. ^ "Milla Baldo-Ceolin". CWP.
10. ^ "Katharine Blodgett". CWP.
11. ^ "Christiane Bonnelle". CWP.
12. ^ "Jenny Rosenthal Bramley". IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. 2012. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
13. ^ "Jennry Rosenthal Bramley". CWP.
14. ^ "Nina Byers". Archived from the original on 2014-10-16. CWP.
15. ^ "Yvette Cauchois". CWP.
16. ^ "Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat". CWP.
17. ^ "Patricia Cladis". CWP.
18. ^ "Esther Conwell". CWP.
19. ^ "Cécile DeWitt-Morette". CWP.
20. ^ "Nancy M. Dowdy". CWP.
21. ^ "Mildred Dresselhaus". CWP.
22. ^ "Helen T. Edwards". Archived from the original on 2013-08-06. CWP.
23. ^ "Magda Ericson". CWP.
24. ^ "Rosslyn Shanks". iwonderweather. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
25. ^ "Joan Feynman". CWP.
26. ^ "Judy Franz". CWP.
27. ^ "Phyllis S. Freier". CWP.
28. ^ "Mary K. Gaillard". CWP.
29. ^ "Fanny Gates". CWP.
30. ^ "Maria Goeppert-Mayer". CWP.
31. ^ "Gertrude Scharff Goldhaber". CWP.
32. ^ "Sulamith Goldhaber". CWP.
33. ^ "Gail Hanson". CWP.
34. ^ "Evans Hayward". CWP.
35. ^ "Caroline Herzenberg". CWP.
36. ^ "Shirley Jackson (physicist)". CWP.
37. ^ "Bertha Swirls Jeffreys". CWP.
38. ^ "Renata Kallosh". Archived from the original on 2004-09-25. CWP.
39. ^ "Berta Karlik". CWP.
40. ^ "Bruria Kaufman". CWP.
41. ^ "Marcia Keith". CWP.
42. ^ "Margaret Kivelson". CWP.
43. ^ "Noemie Benczer Koller". CWP.
44. ^ "Doris Kuhlmann-Wilsdorf". CWP.
45. ^ "Elizabeth Laird". CWP.
46. ^ "Juliet Lee-Franzini". Archived from the original on 2014-10-16. CWP.
47. ^ "Inge Lehmann". Archived from the original on 2015-03-19. CWP.
48. ^ "Kathleen Lonsdale". Archived from the original on 2016-10-05. CWP.
49. ^ "Margaret Eliza Maltby". CWP.
50. ^ "Helen Megaw". Archived from the original on 2016-10-06. CWP.
51. ^ Desanka Trbuhovic-Gjuric (1988). Im Schatten Albert Einsteins: Das tragische Leben der Mileva
Einstein-Maric. Verlag Paul Haupt Bern und Stuttgart. ISBN 3258039739.
52. ^ "Kirstine Meyer". CWP.
53. ^ "Luise Meyer-Schutzmeister". CWP.
54. ^ "Marcia Neugebauer". CWP.
55. ^ "Gertrude Neumark". CWP.
56. ^ "Ida Tacke Noddack". Archived from the original on 2013-08-06. CWP.
57. ^ "Marguerite Perey". CWP.
58. ^ "Melba Phillips". CWP.
59. ^ "Agnes Pockels". CWP.
60. ^ "P. Ya. Polubarinova-Kochina". CWP.
61. ^ "Edith Quimby". CWP.
62. ^ "Helen Quinn". Archived from the original on 2015-02-27. CWP.
63. ^ "Myriam Sarachik". CWP.
64. ^ "Bice Sechi-Zorn". CWP.
65. ^ "Johanna Levelt Sengers". CWP.
66. ^ "Hertha Sponer". CWP.
67. ^ "Isabelle Stone". CWP.
68. ^ "История Кристаллографии Лаборатория Кристаллооптики Института
Кристаллографии Ран"[History of the Crystallography Laboratory Of Crystal-optics of the Institute of
Crystallography of the Russian Academy of Sciences]. Кристаллография (Crystallography) (in
Russian). Moscow, Russia: Издательство МАИК. 55 (6): 1146–1152. 2010. ISSN 0023-4761.
Archived from the original on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
69. ^ "Akademik Asociuar Afërdita Veveçka" [Academic associate Afërdita Veveçka]. akad.gov.al (in
Albanian). Tirana, Albania: Academy of Sciences of Albania. 2017. Archived from the original on 20
October 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
70. ^ "Katharine Way". CWP.
71. ^ "Sau Lan Wu". CWP.
72. ^ "Xide Xie". CWP.
73. ^ Kemp, Hendrika Vande (2001). "Helen Flanders Dunbar (1902-1959)". The Feminist
Psychologist. 28 (1). Retrieved 24 October 2013.
74. ^ Duke, Carla; Fried, Stephen; Pliley, Wilma; Walker, Daley (August 1989). "Contributions to the
history of psychology LIX: Rosalie Rayner Watson: The mother of a behaviorist's sons". Psychological
Reports. 65 (1): 163–169. doi:10.2466/pr0.1989.65.1.163.
75. ^ "Marianne L. Simmel (1923-2010)". American Psychologist. 67 (2): 162. February–March
2012. doi:10.1037/a0026289.
76. ^ Brown, A. M.; Lindsey, D. T. (2013). "Infant color vision and color preferences: A tribute to Davida
Teller". Visual Neuroscience. 30 (5–6): 1–8. doi:10.1017/S0952523813000114. PMID 23879986.
77. ^ "Davida Y. "Vida" Teller, Ph.D". The Seattle Times. Seattle, WA. October 23, 2011.
Retrieved November 20,2013.
References[edit]
Byers, Nina. "Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics". UCLA. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
Herzenberg, Caroline L. (1986). Women scientists from antiquity to the present : an index : an international
reference listing and biographical directory of some notable women scientists from ancient to modern
times. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill Press. ISBN 0-933951-01-9.
Howard, Sethanne (2006). The hidden giants. Lulu.com. ISBN 978-1430300762.
Howes, Ruth H.; Herzenberg, Caroline L. (1999). Their day in the sun : women of the Manhattan Project.
Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press. ISBN 1-56639-719-7.
Rayner-Canham, Marelene; Rayner-Canham, Geoffrey (2001). Women in chemistry : their changing roles
from alchemical times to the mid-twentieth century. Philadelphia: Chemical Heritage
Foundation. ISBN 978-0941901277.
Stevens, Gwendolyn; Gardner, Sheldon (1982). The women of psychology. Cambridge, Mass.:
Schenkman. ISBN 9780870734434.