
Prof. Anjali Goswami
@anjgoswami
🦋 evoswami
ID: 516983196
http://www.goswamilab.com 06-03-2012 23:07:40
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For an evolutionary biologist, everything about Galápagos really is overwhelming, but I especially enjoyed visiting Charles Darwin Foundation-Fundación Charles Darwin yesterday! Would be great to see some of their amazing research in The Linnean Society of London journals, where Darwin published the first description of evolution!





🚨 New paper on #dinosaur #brain evolution & development in Nature Communications 🚨 Pleased to be part of the study led by Logan King showing theropods & ornithischians shared a "dino-wide" brain shape scaling trend different from modern birds and alligators. nature.com/articles/s4146…




So excited that this experiment in team building has just been accepted to Integrative Organismal Biology! We’ll upload the much-improved revised version soon, and many thanks to the reviewers and editor for their helpful suggestions!

A huge thank you to the wonderful Professor Anjali. We loved hearing about your fossil-finding expeditions across the globe and digging for our own fossils at Leith Hill Place! Prof. Anjali Goswami Nosy Crow National Trust Waterstones Guildford Natural History Museum



New pub alert! With Luca Russo & team, we showed developmental instability effects of skull shape in declining otters 🦦 populations. A cool study that shows the use of museum collections and morphometrics in #conservation #Biology Science at the Natural History Museum Prof. Anjali Goswami royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/epdf/10.10…

Otter population declines - skull symmetry impacted in UK by habitat loss, pollution and limited gene flow. from Prof. Anjali Goswami Agnese Lanzetti Carlo Meloro, Ana Loy &al. doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2…


How do lizard skeletons adapt to the evolutionary reduction of limbs? ow.ly/rSAw50TFtzj #ProcB #OpenAccess Dr Marco Camaiti ChappleLab Alistair Evans EvoMorphoLab


Our new paper on #AI for evolutionary morphology is out [email protected]! This massive team effort covers the history of AI for studying morphology, reviews new tools, provides many case studies & a prospectus for using AI to progress diverse topics in evolutionary morphology.




🦴 Signs of bone breakage in extinct giant elephants, likely caused by repeated blows from stone tools, could be the earliest evidence of animal butchery in India, palaeontologists say. ✍🏻 Story by Sahana Ghosh go.nature.com/3YKoS26 Dr. Advait M. Jukar Parth R. Chauhan Florida Museum
