Nicole Reeves

Professor
Anatomy
Ross University School of Medicine
Dominica

Professor Medicine
Biography

Nicole Reeves, PhD, is an anatomist and biological anthropologist with teaching and research interests that include human gross anatomy, cadaver-based dissection, skeletal biology, human variation and adaptation, functional anatomy of limbs, body mass estimation, and taphonomic processes. She received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Texas, her Master of Arts from Texas State University, and a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Tennessee in 2014. Her dissertation research used computed tomography scans to investigate the mechanical and metabolic effects of obesity on cortical bone morphology throughout the human skeleton. After earning her PhD, Dr. Reeves taught at the University of West Georgia briefly before joining the Department of Anatomy at Ross University School of Medicine as an Assistant Professor in 2015. 

Research Intrest

Human Gross Anatomy Cadaver-based Dissection Human Variation Osteology and Skeletal Biology Biological and Forensic Anthropology       

List of Publications
Reeves NM. 2009. Taphonomic Effects of Vulture Scavenging. Journal of Forensic Sciences 54(3):523-528.
Reeves NM, Auerbach BM, Sylvester AD. 2016. Fluctuating and directional asymmetry in the long bones of cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus). American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 160(1):41-51.