James Mulqueeney
@jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
300 followers 510 following 10 posts
PhD Student at the University of Southampton and Natural History Museum, London. Analysing morphological evolution of planktonic foraminifera (and more).
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jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
Some great work by @aniekebrombacher.bsky.social! Super cool to be part of this collaborative project!
tomezard.bsky.social
New paper led by @aniekebrombacher.bsky.social using x-ray CT and laser ablation to detect plastic environmental responses in fossil individuals www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2421549122 featuring @jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social @clivetrue.bsky.social @thefosterlab.bsky.social
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
tomezard.bsky.social
New paper led by @aniekebrombacher.bsky.social using x-ray CT and laser ablation to detect plastic environmental responses in fossil individuals www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2421549122 featuring @jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social @clivetrue.bsky.social @thefosterlab.bsky.social
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
No worries. I have been working with these methods for a while so good to try and demonstrate their potential and help others utilise them. Best of luck with things!
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
Overall, we show the landmark-free methods like Deterministic Atlas Analysis can yield correlated results with traditional manual landmarking & semilandmarking methods. We use the results to propose how to improve these methods in the future!
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
Finally, we compare the downstream estimates of morphological disparity, evolutionary rates and phylogenetic signal. Here, we find significant correlations between methods for almost all metrics.
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
We then compare heatmaps of how shape is measured using each method. To do this we compare the shape of different crania with estimated mean shapes of each analysis (landmark top, DAA below). Here is shown for the specimen, Cacajao calvus.
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
We then compare the correlation between the two methods using Euclidean distances, the Mantel test and the Procrustean randomisation test. We find the methods correlate and that using Poisson meshes significantly improves the correlation between methods.
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
We then visually compare the results of the manual landmarking analysis (754 landmarks and semilandmarks; top left) with the landmark-free approach using 45, 270 and 1,782 control points (top right to bottom left). We notice differences mainly for Cetacea and Primates.
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
Once overcoming modality issues, we apply the method to 322 placental mammal crania as seen in Goswami et al. 2022 (science.org/doi/full/10....). Here, we apply and test a range of kernel widths, which changes the number of control points used to compare shape (replacing landmarks).
jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social
We focus on comparing an implementation of Large Deformation Diffeomorphic Metric Mapping (LDDMM) called a Deterministic Atlas Analysis (DAA) with manual landmarking techniques. We first notice that data modality affects the results, which we overcome by making Poisson meshes.
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
ukiodp.bsky.social
In our March Newsletter we hear from UK-IODP scientists Cedric John, Lewis Grant & @jamesmulqueeney.bsky.social, who've each developed novel applications of machine learning to facilitate rapid, accurate classification of IODP samples
issuu.com/uk-iodp/docs...

@ecord.bsky.social @anzic.bsky.social
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
rnf.bsky.social
turns out you can do some pretty cool stuff with the power of diceCT, SPROUT (www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...), and the SmARTR pipeline (www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...)
a 3d rendering of the skull and cranial muscles of the Eurasian oystercatcher (Haematopus ostralegus)
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
daveyfwright.bsky.social
Highly recommend this very interesting new paper. I'll be reading it again--and then probably again & again. It's insightful, idea rich, & thought provoking even in places where I disagree w/ interpretations! 🧪 #EvoSky

"Three modes of evolution? Remarks on rates of evolution and time scaling"
Three modes of evolution? Remarks on rates of evolution and time scaling
Abstract. Rates of evolution get smaller when they are measured over longer time intervals. As first shown by Gingerich, rates of morphological change meas
academic.oup.com
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
evoswami.bsky.social
New paper! For all of you working with 3d scans (e.g. micro-CT, MRI), check out SPROUT, a rapid open-source tool for generating segmented and parcellated data, meaning your scans are separated into the individual elements without any manual labelling or training. www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Figure showing diverse datasets analysed with SPROUT, including a skink skeleton, aardvark skull, human heart, concrete block, and foraminifera.
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
evoswami.bsky.social
Our new paper on #AI for evolutionary morphology is out! 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. academic.oup.com/iob/article/...
Reposted by James Mulqueeney
evoswami.bsky.social
Laptops: check. Coffee: check. Giant box of homemade focaccia: check. And with all hands on deck, we are now ready to finish off our paper describing SPROUT, a new semi-automated (emphasis on the automated, for real this time) method for parcellating CT images into 3D segments. Stay tuned!