"Tweet
Mystery of Life," Duke Magazine, July-August 1994 (view
the original article)
The
Compleat Dean
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| photo:Jon Gardiner |
In 1994, Duke Magazine's science
editor, Dennis Meredith, wrote about Stephen Nowicki's
research on the intricacies of birdsong. He described
the young zoologist as an "ex-trombonist," an "adept
juggler," and a popular teacher of neuroscience,
who reportedly attempted to illustrate the fallibility
of perception by showing up in class, on at least one
occasion, dressed in drag. ("He is mum about where
he got his dress," Meredith added.)
A decade later, Nowicki, now dean of the natural sciences,
is still performing, albeit in a more recognizable
guise. He has picked up his trombone, donned a rugby
shirt, and joined the pep band.
At forty-nine, Nowicki is by far the oldest member
of the band. But you wouldn't know it by watching him
sprint onto the court during a timeout, dive to the
floor, and roll across the hardwood while the Blue
Devil surfs the human waves. "Who in his right
mind wouldn't want this opportunity?" he asked
an Associated Press reporter in February. "This
really is a great research university, but if you can't
let your hair down once in a while, then you've gotten
kind of stuffy."
With his long hair, mustache, and goatee, Nowicki might
be called scruffy. But never stuffy. His animated lectures
and close attention to students in his upper-level
neurobiology course earned him a Trinity College Distinguished
Teaching Award for 1992-93. "I want to break down
their intellectual complacency," he told Meredith
in 1994. "I want them on the edge of their chairs,
wondering what will happen next."
It's that sense of wonder that has brought Nowicki
the same kind of acclaim in the scientific community
that he's garnered in the classroom. His findings on
the evolution of complexity in birdsong have yielded
insights into the mechanisms of human learning. The
only species besides humans that vocalize and learn
by listening, birds provide a useful model for studying
human brain function.
In 2002, for instance, Nowicki became the first to
demonstrate that a male bird's song performance affects
the female bird's mating response, raising questions
about the neurobiology of aesthetics: why humans, like
birds, consider some things beautiful and others not.
Administrator, researcher, teacher, and, most recently,
pep-band member, Nowicki is soon to add one more title
to the list. His first book, The Evolution of Animal
Communication, is due out from Princeton University
Press this summer.
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