Elodie Mandel-Briefer
@ebriefer.bsky.social
770 followers 480 following 25 posts
Associate Professor in vertebrate social behaviour, University of Copenhagen. Research: animal behaviour, bioacoustics, emotions, cognition, welfare. Mom of 2
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Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
enourani.bsky.social
🦅PhD position 🦅 in my new group at @fbm-unil.bsky.social in Switzerland, studying how the social and resource landscapes shape the learning process for soaring flight. Deadline: Oct 30. Pls repost! career5.successfactors.eu/career?caree...
Golden eagle on the nest in Finland (by O. Karlin)
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
davidho.bsky.social
The Trump regime looked at these maps and thought that it's totally okay to defund USAID and kill 14 million people over the next 5 years (including 4.5 million children under five) because they're not white. Trump apparently also deserves the Nobel Peace Prize.

www.thelancet.com/journals/lan...
Two world maps (panels A and B) display the global impact of USAID health funding and its estimated effect on mortality between 2001 and 2021.

Panel A (Top Map):
Title: "USAID disbursement (in quartile)"

This map shows countries shaded in four shades of purple based on the quartile of USAID health disbursements received from 2001 to 2021.

Darker purple (quartile 4) represents the highest levels of USAID disbursement, while lighter purple (quartile 1) represents the lowest levels.

Countries in sub-Saharan Africa, such as Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, are shaded in the darkest purple, indicating they received the most funding.

Some countries in Latin America, South Asia, and Eastern Europe are shaded in lighter purples.

Grey-colored countries (e.g., China, Russia, Western Europe, and parts of Oceania) are not recipients of USAID funding and are excluded from the analysis.

Panel B (Bottom Map):
Title: "Deaths prevented by USAID, 2001–21 (%)"

This map shows the estimated percentage of deaths prevented due to USAID health assistance, with countries shaded in various tones of blue to green.

Darker blue represents a higher percentage of deaths prevented (up to 18%), while light green represents lower estimated prevention rates (~5%).

Sub-Saharan African countries again show the most notable impact, with many shaded in medium to dark blue, indicating substantial mortality reduction.

Countries in Latin America, South Asia, and Southeast Asia show moderate impact (light blue to green), while much of Europe, East Asia, and North America are greyed out or show minimal/no impact due to lack of USAID engagement.

Color Scales:

Panel A uses a 4-point purple scale for USAID funding quartiles.

Panel B uses a gradient from green to dark blue representing 5% to 18% of deaths prevented.
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
nicolasmathevon.bsky.social
The International Bioacoustics Society is on Bluesky!
@ibacsocial.bsky.social

#bioacoustics
ebriefer.bsky.social
EU FARMERS JOIN CIVIL SOCIETY'S CALLS FOR HIGH-ANIMAL WELFARE FARMING
www.ciwf.eu/media-and-ne...
www.ciwf.eu
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
nicolasmathevon.bsky.social
Bioacoustics Winter School - January 2026
Time to apply! 👇Program and application form👇

www.eneslab.com/bioacoustic-...
Bioacoustics Winter School | ENES lab
www.eneslab.com
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
aosiecka.bsky.social
🔊 This the season! Looking or two MSc students to tackle
1. vocal efficiency across pipit species
and, surpsingly,
2. vocal tract anatomy of the great cormorant (bonus: I also have the heads to model hearing!)

Drop me a line! I love people! :)

docs.google.com/document/d/1...
MSc project
MSc thesis projects in animal communication Laws of brevity across pipit (Anthus) species Across many human languages, there are several general principles in temporal patterning: most frequent word...
docs.google.com
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
nicolasmathevon.bsky.social
Ultrasonic signals support a large-scale communication landscape in wild mice. 👇 New paper by the ENES Bioacoustics Research Team in @currentbiology.bsky.social

authors.elsevier.com/a/1llMH3QW8S...
authors.elsevier.com
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
julietteaychet.bsky.social
Our review on flexibility in animal communication is out! 🥳Many thanks again @marlenfroehlich.bsky.social and @kirstyegraham.bsky.social for inviting me to contribute, and to all co-authors for the inspiring exchange of ideas! 🐵
marlenfroehlich.bsky.social
Now published! 📝✅📢
Our review on flexibility in animal communication is out in Biological Reviews @camphilsoc.bsky.social (Open Access).
Huge thanks again to my fantastic co-authors, especially @kirstyegraham.bsky.social. It was a delight to learn from them!

📖 Read it here: doi.org/10.1111/brv....
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
nicolasmathevon.bsky.social
For over 5,000 y, chanting has been practiced across many Western and Eastern traditions. Chants share distinctive acoustic traits which have evolved culturally to optimize listener relaxation. 👇 new paper @pnas.org by ENES Bioacoustics Research Lab & Co

#bioacoustics
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Chants across seven traditions share acoustic traits that enhance subjective relaxation | PNAS
For over 5,000 y, chanting has been practiced across many Western and Eastern traditions. However, there is hardly any empirical research on 1) whe...
www.pnas.org
ebriefer.bsky.social
Hi Anna, I think null results (the fact that something does not seem to occur) are as interesting as significant results, and should be published. We should stop with this publication bias! Can you clarify what you mean with the XGBoost issue? You could train it to find a pattern?
ebriefer.bsky.social
robdavis1104.bsky.social
Happy to share our new paper, led by Cornelia Warrer, investigating large carnivore snaring rates & drivers of snare occurrence across Kruger NP!

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

We found that carnivores were highly susceptible to being caught in snares & predicted snaring hotspots in Kruger
A spotted hyaena with a snare around its neck. Photo credit: big5photos.com Predicted snare hotspots in Kruger, with the right side image showing predicted presence/absence of snares with sites of known snare detection
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
kajawierucka.bsky.social
📢 Our new paper is out in @methodsinecoevol.bsky.social!

A step toward more comparable approaches in bioacoustics! We tested how different acoustic feature extraction and classification methods affect caller ID classification accuracy.

Read about it here: 🔗 shorturl.at/F31Pb
Reposted by Elodie Mandel-Briefer
asab.org
ASAB @asab.org · Jul 4
We are seeking a full-time Managing Editor for our journal Animal Behaviour. This editor will be involved in all stages of the publication process & must have a general understanding of the topics covered. Position starts Oct 1, application deadline July 31.

More details:
www.asab.org/opportunities
Opportunities — ASAB
www.asab.org
ebriefer.bsky.social
Working on inter-species communication and AI? Submit your application to the Coller-Dolittle price! Looking forward to read many interesting applications! 🤓
collerdolittle.bsky.social
Submissions for the 2025 Coller-Doolittle Challenge are now OPEN! Apply by August 30, 2025. coller-dolittle-24.sites.tau.ac.il