Login / Signup

Occipital condyle width (OCW) is a highly accurate predictor of body mass in therian mammals.

Russell K Engelman
Published in: BMC biology (2022)
OCW-based regression models provide an alternative method of estimating body mass to traditional craniodental and postcranial metrics and are highly accurate despite the broad taxonomic scope of the dataset. Because OCW accurately predicts body mass in most therian mammals, it can be used to estimate body mass in taxa with no close living analogues without concerns of insufficient phylogenetic bracketing or extrapolating beyond the bounds of the data. This, in turn, provides a robust method for estimating body mass in groups for which body mass estimation has previously been problematic (e.g., "creodonts" and other extinct Paleogene mammals).
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • electronic health record
  • molecular docking
  • data analysis
  • sensitive detection
  • fluorescent probe