Jeremy Goldbogen

Jeremy Goldbogen

Stanford University

H-index: 48

North America-United States

About Jeremy Goldbogen

Jeremy Goldbogen, With an exceptional h-index of 48 and a recent h-index of 41 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Stanford University, specializes in the field of Biomechanics, Functional Morphology, Foraging Ecology, Marine Mammals, Scaling.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Submesoscale coupling of krill and whales revealed by aggregative Lagrangian coherent structures

Baleen–Plastic Interactions Reveal High Risk to All Filter-Feeding Whales from Clogging, Ingestion, and Entanglement

Energy densities of key prey species in the California Current Ecosystem

Spin-leap performance by cetaceans is influenced by moment of inertia

Hydrodynamics

211 Feeding Mechanisms

Formation of a fringe: A look inside baleen morphology using a multimodal visual approach

Shaped by their environment: variation in blue whale morphology across three productive coastal ecosystems

Jeremy Goldbogen Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

6873

Citations(since 2020)

4587

Cited By

3884

hIndex(all)

48

hIndex(since 2020)

41

i10Index(all)

106

i10Index(since 2020)

97

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Jeremy Goldbogen Skills & Research Interests

Biomechanics

Functional Morphology

Foraging Ecology

Marine Mammals

Scaling

Top articles of Jeremy Goldbogen

Submesoscale coupling of krill and whales revealed by aggregative Lagrangian coherent structures

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

2024/2/21

Baleen–Plastic Interactions Reveal High Risk to All Filter-Feeding Whales from Clogging, Ingestion, and Entanglement

Oceans

2024/2/1

Energy densities of key prey species in the California Current Ecosystem

Frontiers in Marine Science

2024/1/17

Spin-leap performance by cetaceans is influenced by moment of inertia

Journal of Experimental Biology

2024/1/15

Hydrodynamics

Lecture notes available at http://ocw. mit. edu/courses/mechanical-engineering/2-016-hydrodynamic-13-012-fall-2005/readings/2005reading6. pdf

2005/8

211 Feeding Mechanisms

2024

Formation of a fringe: A look inside baleen morphology using a multimodal visual approach

Journal of Morphology

2023/4

Shaped by their environment: variation in blue whale morphology across three productive coastal ecosystems

Integrative Organismal Biology

2023

Behavioural responses of fin whales to military mid-frequency active sonar

Royal Society Open Science

2023/12/13

How whales dive, feast, and fast: the ecophysiological drivers and limits of foraging in the evolution of cetaceans

2023/11/2

Acoustic behavior of gray whales tagged with biologging devices on foraging grounds

Frontiers in Marine Science

2023/7/12

Jeremy Goldbogen
Jeremy Goldbogen

H-Index: 31

Frank E. Fish

Physiology of Marine Mammals: Adaptations to the Ocean

2023/7/5

A three‐dimensional, dynamic blue whale model for research and scientific communication

Marine Mammal Science

2023/7

Cheap gulp foraging of a giga-predator enables efficient exploitation of sparse prey

Science Advances

2023/6/23

Minke whale feeding rate limitations suggest constraints on the minimum body size for engulfment filtration feeding

Nature Ecology & Evolution

2023/4

From individual responses to population effects: Integrating a decade of multidisciplinary research on blue whales and sonar

Animal Conservation

2022/12

Variation in blubber cortisol levels in a recovering humpback whale population inhabiting a rapidly changing environment

Scientific Reports

2022/11/24

Seasonal gain in body condition of foraging humpback whales along the Western Antarctic Peninsula

Frontiers in Marine Science

2022/11/21

Demography of an ice-obligate mysticete in a region of rapid environmental change

Royal Society Open Science

2022/11/2

Field measurements reveal exposure risk to microplastic ingestion by filter-feeding megafauna

Nature Communications

2022/11/1

See List of Professors in Jeremy Goldbogen University(Stanford University)

Co-Authors

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