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Michael P Taylor
Summary
I am a computer programmer by vocation, but started to study palaeontology in my spare time in 2000. I got my Ph.D from the University of Portsmouth in 2009, and I'm now an honorary research associate at the University of Bristol.
I work on the palaeobiology of sauropods -- the biggest and best of the dinosaurs -- with occasional forays into taxonomy and phylogenetic nomenclature.
I am an advocate of open access, and more generally of transforming our archaic academic publishing practices.
Animal Behavior Biodiversity Evolutionary Studies Paleontology Taxonomy
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PeerJ Contributions
Signed reviews submitted for articles published in PeerJ Note that some articles may not have the review itself made public unless authors have made them open as well.
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This will be tremendously more useful for most purposes if the BioNames pages link to their Wikipedia equivalents. (Yes, that's a comment on the project more than on the paper that...
Journal title abbreviations should be eliminated in the digital age
Absolutely, definitively, unquestionably correct. It's hard to imagine a more pointless waste of researcher time than searching the numerous incompatible list of journal title abbr...
Note to self: see what light Zammit et al. 2008, on plesiosaur neck flexibility, shines on sauropods. My thanks to Adam Stuart Smith for his blog-post http://plesiosauria.com/news/...
Understanding text-based persuasion and support tactics of concerned significant others
This is a bit of a hobby-horse of mine, but ... Can you please revise the abstract so that it says what you discovered? "Results indicate that there was a significant relationsh...
Almost all known sauropod necks are incomplete and distorted
In [a comment on SV-POW!](http://svpow.com/2015/10/06/my-most-depressing-paper/#comment-131464), Oliver Demuth rightly reminds me that the neck of the diplodocine _Kaatedocus_ (Tsc...
Almost all known sauropod necks are incomplete and distorted
In a private email (which I have permission to quote), Matt Lamanna very helpfully reminds me of several other complete or near-complete necks. Read on ... -- **Date:** 7 Oct...
Xenoposeidon is the earliest known rebbachisaurid sauropod dinosaur
Comment from Darren Naish: "The Ashdown Beds Fm is now just the Ashdown Formation". I'll make that change in the revisions.