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Riley J Graham, PhD
Riley J Graham, PhD
Department of Biology, Epigenetics Institute, University of Pennsylvania
Verified email at sas.upenn.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Epigenetic (re)programming of caste-specific behavior in the ant Camponotus floridanus
DF Simola, RJ Graham, CM Brady, BL Enzmann, C Desplan, A Ray, ...
Science 351 (6268), aac6633, 2016
2272016
Epigenetic regulator CoREST controls social behavior in ants
KM Glastad, RJ Graham, L Ju, J Roessler, CM Brady, SL Berger
Molecular cell 77 (2), 338-351. e6, 2020
412020
Ant colonies prefer infected over uninfected nest sites
L Pontieri, S Vojvodic, R Graham, JS Pedersen, TA Linksvayer
PLoS One 9 (11), e111961, 2014
352014
and Berger, SL (2016). Epigenetic (re) programming of caste-specific behavior in the ant Camponotus floridanus
DF Simola, RJ Graham, CM Brady, BL Enzmann, C Desplan, A Ray
Science 351, 6268, 0
5
Geographically disjunct populations and widespread genets in an endangered halophilic plant, the Amargosa niterwort (Nitrophila mohavensis)
AP Martin, E Paulson, R Graham
Conservation Genetics 14, 953-962, 2013
42013
Epigenetic Mechanisms Governing Behavioral Reprogramming in the Ant Camponotus floridanus
RJ Graham
University of Pennsylvania, 2018
22018
Epigenetic programming of caste-specific division of labor in the ant Camponotus floridanus
RJ Graham, DF Simola, CM Brady, BL Enzmann, C Desplan, A Ray, ...
2016 International Congress of Entomology, 2016
2016
Ant colonies prefer nest sites containing infectious corpses
L Pontieri, S Vojvodic, R Graham, J Pedersen, T Linksvayer
IUSSI, 2014
2014
Moving in with infectious corpses: host decision or pathogen manipulation?
L Pontieri, S Vojvodic, R Graham, JS Pedersen, TA Linksvayer
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Articles 1–9