World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Environmental Sciences

D-Index
52
Citations
15844
World Ranking
4386
National Ranking
1632

Overview

Steven M. Stanley is affiliated with the University of Hawaii at Manoa in the United States. Their academic contributions predominantly lie within the field of Medicine, with a focus on several interconnected subfields such as Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Oncology, and Surgery.

The key topics explored in their research include Lung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment, Lung Cancer Treatments and Mutations, Lung Cancer Research Studies, Nutritional Studies and Diet, Consumer Attitudes and Food Labeling, Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet, and Sarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment.

Recent publications by Steven M. Stanley encompass a variety of subjects and appear in scholarly venues with distinct thematic focuses. Notable papers include:

  • Lobectomy vs Segmentectomy in Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer With Lymphatic Vascular Invasion, 2025, published in Annals of Thoracic Surgery Short Reports
  • Effect of Food Processing on Total Antioxidant Capacity, 2021, published in Current Developments in Nutrition
  • Abstract 6746: Academic facility is associated with improved survival in patients with leiomyosarcoma: a national cancer database analysis, 2023, published in Cancer Research

Steven M. Stanley has collaborated frequently with a network of co-authors, involving repeated partnerships that indicate ongoing research relationships. Frequent collaborators include Marco Braaten, Peter T. Silberstein, Anjali Mishra, Ali Bin Abdul Jabbar, and Muhammad Sohaib Asghar.

Their publications are distributed among specialized journals such as Annals of Thoracic Surgery Short Reports, Current Developments in Nutrition, and Cancer Research. This distribution reflects a multidisciplinary approach linking clinical medicine, nutrition, and oncology research.

Best Publications

  • Macroevolution, pattern and process

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Relation of Shell Form to Life Habits of the Bivalvia (Mollusca)

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Secular oscillations in the carbonate mineralogy of reef-building and sediment-producing organisms driven by tectonically forced shifts in seawater chemistry

    Steven M Stanley;Lawrence A Hardie

  • A theory of evolution above the species level.

    Steven M. Stanley

  • AN EXPLANATION FOR COPE'S RULE.

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Principles of paleontology

    David M. Raup;Steven M. Stanley

  • A Double Mass Extinction at the End of the Paleozoic Era

    S. M. Stanley;X. Yang

  • Functional morphology and evolution of byssally attached bivalve mollusks

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Estimates of the magnitudes of major marine mass extinctions in earth history

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Earth System History

    Steven M. Stanley

  • An ecological theory for the sudden origin of multicellular life in the late precambrian.

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Post-Paleozoic adaptive radiation of infaunal bivalve molluscs; a consequence of mantle fusion and siphon formation

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Anatomy of a regional mass extinction; Plio-Pleistocene decimation of the western Atlantic bivalve fauna

    Steven M. Stanley

  • An Analysis of the History of Marine Animal Diversity

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Evidence from ammonoids and conodonts for multiple Early Triassic mass extinctions

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Influence of seawater chemistry on biomineralization throughout phanerozoic time: Paleontological and experimental evidence

    Steven M. Stanley;Steven M. Stanley

  • Population size extinction and speciation the fission effect in neogene bivalvia

    Steven M. Stanley

  • Hypercalcification: Paleontology Links Plate Tectonics and Geochemistry to Sedimentology

    Steven M. Stanley;Lawrence A. Hardie;Morton K. Blaustein

  • Trends, rates, and patterns of evolution in the Bivalvia

    Steven M. Stanley;A. Hallam

  • Low-magnesium calcite produced by coralline algae in seawater of Late Cretaceous composition

    Steven M. Stanley;Justin B. Ries;Lawrence A. Hardie

Frequent Co-Authors

Lawrence A. Hardie
Lawrence A. Hardie Johns Hopkins University
Justin B. Ries
Justin B. Ries Northeastern University
Xiao Yang
Xiao Yang Shanghai Jiao Tong University
James P. Kennett
James P. Kennett University of California, Santa Barbara

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Related Online Degrees & Career Pathways

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