About

Collins Adjei-Antwi holds an Mphil in Human Anatomy and Forensic Science and is an assistant lecturer in the Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine. He lectures Human Anatomy in the School of Medicine and Dentistry and other faculties under the College of Health Sciences, KNUST. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Human Anatomy and Cell Biology.

Research Summary

(inferred from publications by AI)

This researcher has made significant contributions across diverse disciplines by integrating anthropological, evolutionary, genetic, forensic, and surgical methodologies to study ethnic differentiation using body measurement techniques. Through their work on forensic anthropology, evolutionary psychology, nasal surgery, hemispheric asymmetry studies, and breast cancer treatment, they demonstrate a commitment to understanding how ethnicity is inferred through body features across various scientific fields. Their research highlights the application of diverse methodologies in analyzing human traits and behaviors within diverse contexts, particularly focusing on Ghanaian populations using anthropological data for forensic applications and evolutionary insights into cultural and physiological differences.

Research Themes

Collaboration Network

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About This Profile

This profile is generated from publicly available publication metadata and is intended for research discovery purposes. Themes, summaries, and trajectories are inferred computationally and may not capture the full scope of the lecturer's work. For authoritative information, please refer to the official KNUST profile.