Edward L. B. Terrace is a psychologist known for his work on animal behavior, particularly his research on language acquisition by chimpanzees. His most famous work is the book "Nim Chimpsky: The Chimp Who Would Be Human," which documented his experiment teaching sign language to a chimpanzee named Nim Chimpsky.
Edward B. Brain has written: 'Contributed papers'
Edward B. May has written: 'Why have priests at all?...'
Edward B. Proud has written: 'Penny black plates'
Edward B. Montgomery has written: 'The foundations to access to knowledge'
Edward B. Johns has written: 'Health for effective living'
Edward B. Temple has written: 'The physical optical analysis and application of the Schlieren interferometer'
David B. Edward has written: 'The history of Texas' -- subject(s): Constitution, History
Edward H. Frank has written: 'SBus specification B.0'
Edward B. Marks has written: 'They all had glamour' -- subject(s): Biography, Music, Musicians, Singers, Theater
B. Edward McClellan has written: 'Schools and the shaping of character' -- subject(s): Moral education, Bibliography, History
B. Edward Shlesinger has written: 'The art of successful inventing' -- subject(s): Inventions 'How to invent' -- subject(s): Inventions
Edward B. Wetherill has written: 'Repair & remodeling estimating methods' -- subject(s): Repair and reconstruction, Buildings, Estimates