Gray also performs research on animal cognition. One of his main research-projects studies the use of tools among New Caledonian crows.
Career
Gray completed his Ph.D. at the University of Auckland in 1990.[2] He spent four years lecturing at the University of Otago, New Zealand, before returning to the School of Psychology at the University of Auckland. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and has been awarded with several fellowships, as well as the inaugural Mason Durie Medal (in 2012) for his pioneering contributions to social science.[3] In 2014, he became one of the two founding directors of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Jena, Germany, where he has been heading the Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution [until it moved to Leipzig in 2020]. He also holds adjunct positions in the School of Psychology at the University of Auckland and the Department of Philosophy at the Australian National University.[1]
Gray's doctoral thesis was titled Design, constraint and construction: essays and experiments on evolution and foraging.[4]
^ abGray, Russell. "Russell Gray". Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Retrieved 3 Dec 2021.
^Gray, Russell (1990). Design, constraint and construction: essays and experiments on evolution and foraging (Doctoral thesis). ResearchSpace@Auckland, University of Auckland. hdl:2292/1852.
^Greenhill, Simon (2008). The archives of history : a phylogenetic approach to the study of language (Doctoral thesis). ResearchSpace@Auckland, University of Auckland. hdl:2292/51143.