Human-Animal Interaction Studies

External reference: https://openalex.org/T11214

  1. Ancient dog genomes show wide Palaeolithic distribution in western Eurasia
    Genetic analysis of ancient dog remains reveals widespread distribution of homogeneous dog populations across Europe and Anatolia during the Late Upper Palaeolithic, suggesting dogs were exchanged.
  2. Early European dogs shared ancestry with later dogs worldwide
    Genome-wide analysis of 216 ancient canid remains reveals the genomic history of early European dogs, with the oldest dog genome dating back 14,200 years from Switzerland.
  3. Topic modelling revealed known and potential canine disease phenotypes
    Machine learning analysis of one million canine electronic health records identifies disease phenotypes, breed predispositions, and emerging health patterns using unsupervised topic modeling.
  4. Cats for rodent control on dairy farms are not yet supported
    Position paper examining insufficient empirical evidence for deploying desexed cats to control rodents on Australian dairy farms, outlining required monitoring and modeling studies.