Benson Ginsburg Explained

Benson Ginsburg
Birth Name:Benson Earl Ginsburg
Birth Date:16 July 1918
Birth Place:Detroit, Michigan
Death Place:Storrs, Connecticut
Nationality:American
Fields:Behavior genetics
Workplaces:University of Chicago
University of Connecticut
Education:Wayne State University
University of Chicago
Thesis Title:The Effects of the Major Gene Controlling Coat Color in the Guinea Pig on DOPA Oxidase Activity in Skin Extracts
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Thesis Year:1943
Doctoral Advisor:Sewall Wright
Doctoral Students:Kevin B. MacDonald
Stephen Maxson
Awards:University of Chicago Quantrell Award (twice)
1980 Dobzhansky Memorial Award from the Behavior Genetics Association
Spouse:[1]
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Children:Faye Ginsburg
Judy Meyer
Deborah Szajnberg

Benson Earl Ginsburg (July 16, 1918 – August 17, 2016) was an American behavioral geneticist who taught at the University of Chicago and the University of Connecticut. He was a co-founder of the Behavior Genetics Association.

Early life and education

Ginsburg was born on July 16, 1918, in Detroit, Michigan. His parents, Sonia and Morris Ginsburg, were both recently arrived Jewish immigrants from Russia. He received his undergraduate education at Wayne State University, where he was originally a journalism major, before switching to majoring in English, and then becoming a biology major in the second semester of his junior year. He graduated from Wayne State cum laude in 1939, and received his master's degree from there in 1941. He then enrolled in a summer class in zoology at the University of Chicago, where he received his Ph.D. in 1943 under the supervision of Sewall Wright.[2]

Career

Ginsburg joined the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1946, where he helped develop an undergraduate natural science program, of which he was later the chair. Also in 1946, he and his family began taking summer trips to Bar Harbor, Maine, and he began conducting research at the Jackson Laboratory in mice and rabbits.[2] He continued to conduct research at the Jackson Laboratory every summer until the 1980s. In 1963, he was appointed the William Rainey Harper Professor of Biology at the University of Chicago, a position he held until leaving the university's faculty in 1968. That year, he joined the faculty of the University of Connecticut, where he co-founded the Department of Biobehavioral Sciences in 1969. He headed this department from 1969 to 1985. He played a major role in founding the Behavior Genetics Association, and hosted its first meeting on the University of Connecticut's campus in 1971.[2] He retired from the University of Connecticut in 1997, after which he became an emeritus professor there; he remained an active researcher even after his retirement.[3]

Research

Ginsburg conducted research in many different animal species, including fruit flies, dogs, mice, and humans. Early in his career, while at the University of Chicago, he began researching the behavior genetics of mice before moving to research coyotes and subsequently wolves. His initial goal was to breed wolves that did not display the aggressive behavior characteristic of their wild counterparts.[4] He subsequently continued this research at the University of Connecticut, where he started the Wolf Project in a protected enclosure on the university's campus. This nine-year project aimed, among other things, to assess the behavioral factors that underlie mating dynamics in wolves.[5]

Honors and awards

Ginsburg was a two-time fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences: once in 1956 and once in 1965. He was also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Psychological Society, the Animal Behavior Society, and the International Society for Research on Aggression.[3] In 1980, he received the Dobzhansky Memorial Award from the Behavior Genetics Association.[6] In 2001, he received the International Behavioral and Neural Genetics Society's Award for pioneering and continuing contributions to the field.[2]

Personal life and death

Ginsburg married Pearl on August 29, 1941; they were married until her death in 1998. They had three children: Judy, Deborah, and Faye.[2] [7] Benson Ginsburg died on August 17, 2016, in Storrs, Connecticut, at the age of 98.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Ginsburg, Pearl (miner) . 1998-11-10 . The Hartford Courant . 2018-06-21 . en.
  2. Maxson . Stephen C. . 2011-03-12 . A Brief Family and Academic Biography of Benson E. Ginsburg . Behavior Genetics . en . 41 . 6 . 783–786 . 10.1007/s10519-011-9458-1 . 21399904 . 207095233 . 0001-8244.
  3. Maxson . S. C. . November 2016 . Benson Earl Ginsburg (1918-2016): a pioneer in behavior genetics . Genes, Brain and Behavior . en . 15 . 8 . 777–778 . 10.1111/gbb.12350 . 27868377 . 1601-1848. free .
  4. 1962-09-14 . Science: Man Bites Wolf . Time . en-US . 0040-781X.
  5. Jenks . Susan M. . 2011-03-16 . A Longitudinal Study of the Sociosexual Dynamics in a Captive Family Group of Wolves: The University of Connecticut Wolf Project . Behavior Genetics . en . 41 . 6 . 810–829 . 10.1007/s10519-011-9453-6 . 21409588 . 10147827 . 0001-8244.
  6. Web site: Emeritus psychology professor was among first to study behavior genetics . 2006-04-24 . UConn Advance . 2018-06-21.
  7. Ginsburg . Faye . 2009-03-26 . On Being Raised by Benson (And Wolves) . Bridges: A Jewish Feminist Journal . en . 14 . 1 . 111–114 . 10.2979/BRI.2009.14.1.111 . 143601970 . 1558-9552.
  8. Web site: University obituaries . Fall 2016 . The University of Chicago Magazine . en . 2018-06-21.