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| Temple Grandin and friends |
Temple Grandin’s professional resume is impressive: BS, MS and PhD degrees; dozens of awards and professional papers; author, editor and subject of books and videos; and currently associate professor of animal science at Colorado State University. Dr. Grandin is also autistic, which she credits for her ability to understand how animals see, think and feel. We talk with her about her riveting book, Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior (co-written with Catherine Johnson, PhD).
I thought the article and the inerview with Temple Grandlin was great. I expespecialy like the cheese puff and the parrot, how conditioning works.well I meet temple Grandlin the year in the barns and noble in scottsdale and I have read her there most recent books.I think she makes the most sene to me out of the dog and animal science I have read. I used to think autistic people where differn't, but now I know inside our minds we all think,reason touch feel and explor the world in simular ways if we youse what we think in our minds we can train and understand animals better. mybe somtime we make to many rules and make the world more complacated then it should be. ok I have dilexia and i'am not the best speller , but i'am always tring to do beeter. no speel check on this.
Steven DeMarlie