Automated Author ProfileLively, Joshua R.
Lively, Joshua R.
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 5.1 (sum of 3 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Prognathodon stadtmani was discovered in the Campanian portion of the Upper Cretaceous Mancos Shale in western Colorado in 1975. Following its original description almost two decades ago, more material of the holotype was prepared. Those new elements include a quadrate, often considered one of the most critical bones for understanding mosasaur systematics, portions of the skull roof, posterior mandible, and braincase. Prognathodon stadtmani exhibits a suite of features that include both derived character states observed in later mosasaurines and primitive features present in earlier members of the clade, such as Clidastes. Although the quadrate resembles those of Prognathodon and Globidens in some respects, it lacks fusion between the suprastapedial process and ascending tympanic rim observed in those taxa. I ran a series of phylogenetic analyses using parsimony and Bayesian inference to understand the relationships of this taxon. Regardless of character selection or methodology, ‘Prognathodon’ stadtmani was not found to be monophyletic with the rest of the genus Prognathodon. Depending on method, it was recovered as the sister taxon to the rest of Globidensini, the sister taxon to Mosasaurini + Globidens, or an early diverging mosasaurine outside of both Globidensini and Mosasaurini. Owing to these results, I assign the type to a new genus, Gnathomortis, gen. nov., yielding the species Gnathomortis stadtmani, comb. nov. Furthermore, the rest of the genus Prognathodon and the clade Globidensini more broadly were not consistently recovered as monophyletic. Many characters of the quadrate and the dentition that typically united those clades are optimized as homoplastic based on my resulting topologies.
Authors
- Lively, Joshua R.
Prognathodon stadtmani was discovered in the Campanian portion of the Upper Cretaceous Mancos Shale in western Colorado in 1975. Following its original description almost two decades ago, more material of the holotype was prepared. Those new elements include a quadrate, often considered one of the most critical bones for understanding mosasaur systematics, portions of the skull roof, posterior mandible, and braincase. Prognathodon stadtmani exhibits a suite of features that include both derived character states observed in later mosasaurines and primitive features present in earlier members of the clade, such as Clidastes. Although the quadrate resembles those of Prognathodon and Globidens in some respects, it lacks fusion between the suprastapedial process and ascending tympanic rim observed in those taxa. I ran a series of phylogenetic analyses using parsimony and Bayesian inference to understand the relationships of this taxon. Regardless of character selection or methodology, ‘Prognathodon’ stadtmani was not found to be monophyletic with the rest of the genus Prognathodon. Depending on method, it was recovered as the sister taxon to the rest of Globidensini, the sister taxon to Mosasaurini + Globidens, or an early diverging mosasaurine outside of both Globidensini and Mosasaurini. Owing to these results, I assign the type to a new genus, Gnathomortis, gen. nov., yielding the species Gnathomortis stadtmani, comb. nov. Furthermore, the rest of the genus Prognathodon and the clade Globidensini more broadly were not consistently recovered as monophyletic. Many characters of the quadrate and the dentition that typically united those clades are optimized as homoplastic based on my resulting topologies.
Authors
- Lively, Joshua R.
Prognathodon stadtmani was discovered in the Campanian portion of the Upper Cretaceous Mancos Shale in western Colorado in 1975. Following its original description almost two decades ago, more material of the holotype was prepared. Those new elements include a quadrate, often considered one of the most critical bones for understanding mosasaur systematics, portions of the skull roof, posterior mandible, and braincase. Prognathodon stadtmani exhibits a suite of features that include both derived character states observed in later mosasaurines and primitive features present in earlier members of the clade, such as Clidastes. Although the quadrate resembles those of Prognathodon and Globidens in some respects, it lacks fusion between the suprastapedial process and ascending tympanic rim observed in those taxa. I ran a series of phylogenetic analyses using parsimony and Bayesian inference to understand the relationships of this taxon. Regardless of character selection or methodology, ‘Prognathodon’ stadtmani was not found to be monophyletic with the rest of the genus Prognathodon. Depending on method, it was recovered as the sister taxon to the rest of Globidensini, the sister taxon to Mosasaurini + Globidens, or an early diverging mosasaurine outside of both Globidensini and Mosasaurini. Owing to these results, I assign the type to a new genus, Gnathomortis, gen. nov., yielding the species Gnathomortis stadtmani, comb. nov. Furthermore, the rest of the genus Prognathodon and the clade Globidensini more broadly were not consistently recovered as monophyletic. Many characters of the quadrate and the dentition that typically united those clades are optimized as homoplastic based on my resulting topologies.
Authors
- Lively, Joshua R.