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Phyllis S. Johnson

Research Interests:
Anthropological Archaeology
Lithic Technology; Ritual and Domestic Production
Archaeological Ethics
Gender in Archaeology
Computational Archaeology
Machine Learning
Native American and Indigenous Studies
Education:

B.A., Anthropology, Wright State University, 2007

M.A., Anthropology, University of Tennessee, 2009

Ph.D., Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, 2021

Research:

Phyllis Johnson received her PhD in Anthropology from Vanderbilt University in 2021 and is currently a University Research Postdoctoral Scholar in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Kentucky. Dr. Johnson's research involves the development and application of computational methods to address difficult archaeological questions surrounding ancient economies, site formation processes, and social structure. Dr. Johnson has over 15 years of archaeological experience in the Eastern US and Mesoamerica, and her current research combines experimental archaeology with novel machine and deep learning techniques to the examination of stone tool production to illuminate ancient actors, such as commoners and women, who are often rendered invisible in the archaeological record. Dr. Johnson is also keenly interested in equity issues in both research and education and is actively involved in supporting women in archaeology. 

 

Selected Publications:

Johnson, Phyllis S., Markus Eberl, Michael McBride, and Rebecca Estrada Aguila. 2021 Dynamic Image Analysis as a Method for Discerning Microdebitage from Soil Samples. Lithic Technology 46(2):111-118.

Johnson, Phyllis S., James C. Pritchard, and Eric C. Poplin. 2016 In Much Smaller Things Forgotten: a Case for Microartifact Analysis in CRM. Southeastern Archaeology 35(1):1-13.