Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q533102> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 72 of
72
with 100 triples per page.
- Q533102 subject Q13244777.
- Q533102 subject Q5312304.
- Q533102 subject Q6135380.
- Q533102 subject Q6619589.
- Q533102 subject Q7006242.
- Q533102 subject Q7027091.
- Q533102 subject Q7453817.
- Q533102 subject Q8244212.
- Q533102 subject Q8255340.
- Q533102 subject Q8266462.
- Q533102 subject Q8426089.
- Q533102 subject Q9484845.
- Q533102 abstract "Overton Brent Berlin (born 1936) is an American anthropologist, most noted for his work with linguist Paul Kay on color, and his ethnobiological research among the Maya of Chiapas, Mexico.He received his Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1964. Until recently, Berlin was Graham Perdue Professor of Anthropology at the University of Georgia, where he was also director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies and co-director for the Laboratories of Ethnobiology.His work alongside Paul Kay on the 1969 publication of Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution built on the ideas of Lazarus Geiger in the field of color terminology research and has been highly influential in anthropology, linguistics and cognitive sciences. Berlin and Kay concluded that the number of basic color terms in the world's languages are limited and center on certain focal colors, assumed to be cognitively hardwired.He led the Maya ICGB project, a bioprospecting consortium, supported by the Biodiversity Program for the National Institutes of Health, which was closed in 2001 after accusations of failure to obtain adequate informed consent from the Maya community from which he obtained indigenous knowledge. These allegations were primarily driven by a Canadian based political activist organization, known at the time as RAFI.He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1981.".
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1075.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q111352.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q11727799.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q12585.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1321.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q13244777.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428168.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q147638.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q17165343.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q184992.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1852803.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q2177380.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q23404.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q2375831.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q322713.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q3314452.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q376431.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q387073.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q390551.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q397948.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q41506.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q419.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q45914.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q463303.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q4866944.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q512355.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q5312304.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q5464452.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q60123.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6049821.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6135380.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6619589.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q664609.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7006242.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7027091.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7453817.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q752297.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q75350.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q761534.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q764527.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q79913.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8162.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8244212.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8255340.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8266462.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8269924.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q831725.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q841408.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8426089.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q851890.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q864294.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q864679.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q9484845.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q96.
- Q533102 wikiPageWikiLink Q965731.
- Q533102 type Thing.
- Q533102 comment "Overton Brent Berlin (born 1936) is an American anthropologist, most noted for his work with linguist Paul Kay on color, and his ethnobiological research among the Maya of Chiapas, Mexico.He received his Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1964.".
- Q533102 label "Brent Berlin".