Matthew D. Hall

Matthew D. Hall

Monash University

H-index: 27

Oceania-Australia

About Matthew D. Hall

Matthew D. Hall, With an exceptional h-index of 27 and a recent h-index of 22 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Monash University, specializes in the field of monash evolution, evolutionary genetics, sexual dimorphism, infectious disease, disease ecology.

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

Is there a sicker sex? Dose relationships modify male–female differences in infection prevalence

The hidden costs of resistance: Contrasting the energetics of successfully and unsuccessfully fighting infection

Assessing the role of family level variation and heat shock gene expression in the thermal stress response of the mosquito Aedes aegypti

Can pharmaceutical pollution alter the spread of infectious disease? A case study using fluoxetine

Travelling with a parasite: the evolution of resistance and dispersal syndromes during experimental range expansion

Infectious disease ecology and evolution in a changing world

Host sex modulates the energetics of pathogen proliferation and its dependence on environmental resources

Amino acid quality modifies the quantitative availability of protein for reproduction in Drosophila melanogaster

Matthew D. Hall Information

University

Position

School of Biological Sciences

Citations(all)

2534

Citations(since 2020)

1292

Cited By

1763

hIndex(all)

27

hIndex(since 2020)

22

i10Index(all)

52

i10Index(since 2020)

40

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Matthew D. Hall Skills & Research Interests

monash evolution

evolutionary genetics

sexual dimorphism

infectious disease

disease ecology

Top articles of Matthew D. Hall

Is there a sicker sex? Dose relationships modify male–female differences in infection prevalence

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

2024/1/10

The hidden costs of resistance: Contrasting the energetics of successfully and unsuccessfully fighting infection

Functional Ecology

2024

Assessing the role of family level variation and heat shock gene expression in the thermal stress response of the mosquito Aedes aegypti

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B

2023/3/27

Can pharmaceutical pollution alter the spread of infectious disease? A case study using fluoxetine

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B

2023/3/27

Travelling with a parasite: the evolution of resistance and dispersal syndromes during experimental range expansion

bioRxiv

2020/1/1

Infectious disease ecology and evolution in a changing world

2023/3/27

Host sex modulates the energetics of pathogen proliferation and its dependence on environmental resources

The American Naturalist

2022/5/1

Amino acid quality modifies the quantitative availability of protein for reproduction in Drosophila melanogaster

Journal of Insect physiology

2022/5/1

Warmer temperatures limit the effects of antidepressant pollution on life-history traits

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

2022/2/9

Condition-dependent sexual reproduction is driven by benefits, not costs of sex

Behavioral Ecology

2021/11/1

Thermal limits in the face of infectious disease: How important are pathogens?

2021/10

Effect of habitat permanence on life-history: extending the Daphnia model into new climate spaces

Evolutionary Ecology

2021/8

Microbes increase thermal sensitivity in the mosquito Aedes aegypti, with the potential to change disease distributions

PLoS neglected tropical diseases

2021/7/22

Temperature and pathogen exposure act independently to drive host phenotypic trajectories

Biology Letters

2021/6/16

Sexually antagonistic evolution of mitochondrial and nuclear linkage

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

2021/5/1

An evolutionary trade‐off between parasite virulence and dispersal at experimental invasion fronts

Ecology Letters

2021/4/1

Energetic scaling across different host densities and its consequences for pathogen proliferation

Functional Ecology

2021/2

Pathogen exposure reduces sexual dimorphism in a host’s upper thermal limits

Ecology and Evolution

2020/12

Fitness outcomes in relation to individual variation in constitutive innate immune function

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

2020/11/11

The influence of immune activation on thermal tolerance along a latitudinal cline

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

2020/9/1

See List of Professors in Matthew D. Hall University(Monash University)

Co-Authors

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