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Peter Otis Gray is an American psychology researcher and scholar. He is a research professor of psychology at Boston College , and the author of an introductory psychology textbook. He is known for his work on the interaction between education and play, and for his evolutionary perspective on psychology theory.
Peter Gray (psychologist), American psychologist and author of the introductory psychology textbook, Psychology; Peter Gray (sailor) (1935–2022), Irish Olympic sailor; Peter Gray (writer) (1807–1887), Scottish writer; Peter S. Gray (born 1957), Olympic equestrian for Bermuda and Canada; Pete Gray (1915–2002), one-armed Major League ...
Peter Gray (born 1965) is Professor of Modern Irish History at Queen's University Belfast. He specializes in the history of British-Irish relations in the 19th century, particularly the Great Irish Famine. He is a member of the International Network of Irish Famine Studies, [1] and a member of the Irish Association of Professional Historians. [2]
Peter James Gray (né Wyshner; March 6, 1915 – June 30, 2002) was an American professional baseball outfielder who played for the St. Louis Browns of Major League Baseball for one season in 1945. He was notable for playing despite having lost his right arm in a childhood accident.
Air Commodore Peter W Gray FRAeS is a retired senior Royal Air Force commander and an air power studies academic. [1] Peter Gray began his career in the Royal Air Force as a navigator on F-4 Phantom IIs. He went on to command 101 Squadron. Gray worked for three years in the Cabinet Office and in the Ministry of Defence.
Peter Robert Gray (10 May 1980 – 30 April 2011) was an Australian environmental activist, notable for two landmark court cases, and for having thrown his shoes in public at former Prime Minister of Australia John Howard in protest over Australia's participation in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Gray's work is notable for its range and diversity. He was the first to measure temperature-position profiles in gaseous systems on the verge of ignition by a very fine thermocouple technique. The results show that N 2 H 4 oxidation is a pure thermal branched-chain explosion and that multiple cool flames in hydrocarbon oxidations are thermokinetic.
Peter Philip Gray (born in Sydney in 1946) is a bioengineer who has played a key role in the development of modern industrial biotechnology in Australia. He was professor and head of biotechnology at the University of New South Wales (UNSW), Sydney, from 1988–2003, and was the inaugural director of the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (AIBN) at The University of ...