Doug M Boyer
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Explore the profile of Doug M Boyer including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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81
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789
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Recent Articles
31.
St Clair E, Boyer D
Am J Phys Anthropol
. 2016 Jun;
161(2):237-58.
PMID: 27312120
The goal of this research is to evaluate the relative strength of the influences of diet, size, and phylogenetic signal on dental geometric shape. Accurate comprehension of these factors and...
32.
Marigo J, Roig I, Seiffert E, Moya-Sola S, Boyer D
J Hum Evol
. 2016 Feb;
91:122-43.
PMID: 26852816
Astragali and calcanei of Anchomomys frontanyensis, a small adapiform from the middle Eocene of Sant Jaume de Frontanyà (Southern Pyrenean basins, northeastern Spain) are described in detail. Though these bones...
33.
Copes L, Lucas L, Thostenson J, Hoekstra H, Boyer D
Sci Data
. 2016 Feb;
3:160001.
PMID: 26836025
A dataset of high-resolution microCT scans of primate skulls (crania and mandibles) and certain postcranial elements was collected to address questions about primate skull morphology. The sample consists of 489...
34.
Prufrock K, Boyer D, Silcox M
Am J Phys Anthropol
. 2016 Jan;
159(4):683-97.
PMID: 26739378
Objectives: The disappearance of the North American plesiadapoids (stem primates, or plesiadapiforms) in the latest Paleocene has been attributed to competition with rodents over dietary resources. This study compares molar...
35.
Patel B, Wallace I, Boyer D, Granatosky M, Larson S, Stern Jr J
J Hum Evol
. 2015 Nov;
88:79-84.
PMID: 26553820
It has long been thought that quadrupedal primates successfully occupy arboreal environments, in part, by relying on their grasping feet to control balance and propulsion, which frees their hands to...
36.
Boyer D, Winchester J, Glynn C, Puente J
Anat Rec (Hoboken)
. 2015 Aug;
298(11):1816-23.
PMID: 26228692
Morphometric datasets only convey useful information about variation when measurement landmarks and relevant anatomical axes are clearly defined. We propose that anatomical axes of 3D digital models of bones can...
37.
Seiffert E, Costeur L, Boyer D
PeerJ
. 2015 Jul;
3:e1036.
PMID: 26131376
The middle Eocene species Caenopithecus lemuroides, known solely from the Egerkingen fissure fillings in Switzerland, was the first Paleogene fossil primate to be correctly identified as such (by Ludwig Rütimeyer...
38.
Yapuncich G, Gladman J, Boyer D
Am J Phys Anthropol
. 2015 Mar;
157(3):472-506.
PMID: 25821153
Objective: Multiple meaningful ecological characterizations of a species revolve around body mass. Because body mass cannot be directly measured in extinct taxa, reliable body mass predictors are needed. Many published...
39.
Boyer D, Yapuncich G, Butler J, Dunn R, Seiffert E
Am J Phys Anthropol
. 2015 Feb;
157(1):134-77.
PMID: 25682740
Objectives: Comprehensive quantification of the shape and proportions of the medial tibial facet (MTF) of the talus (=astragalus) has been lacking for Primates and their closest relatives. In this study,...
40.
Chester S, Bloch J, Boyer D, Clemens W
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
. 2015 Jan;
112(5):1487-92.
PMID: 25605875
Earliest Paleocene Purgatorius often is regarded as the geologically oldest primate, but it has been known only from fossilized dentitions since it was first described half a century ago. The...