Tamra C. Mendelson

Tamra C. Mendelson

University of Maryland, Baltimore County

H-index: 29

North America-United States

About Tamra C. Mendelson

Tamra C. Mendelson, With an exceptional h-index of 29 and a recent h-index of 19 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Maryland, Baltimore County, specializes in the field of speciation, sexual selection, animal communication, Etheostoma, JEBED.

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

How Important Is Sexual Isolation to Speciation?

Comparative analysis reveals assortative mate preferences in darters independent of sympatry and sex

Using generative artificial intelligence to test hypotheses about animal signal evolution: A case study in an ornamented fish

Could sexual selection be driven by the mistaken inferences of young females?

From natural to sexual selection: Revealing a hidden preference for camouflage patterns

Using Neural Style Transfer to study the evolution of animal signal design: A case study in an ornamented fish

Sparsity in an artificial neural network predicts beauty: Towards a model of processing-based aesthetics

Body size is not correlated with the evolution of male coloration in darters (Percidae: Etheostomatinae)

Tamra C. Mendelson Information

University

Position

EandE@UMBC

Citations(all)

3258

Citations(since 2020)

1226

Cited By

2626

hIndex(all)

29

hIndex(since 2020)

19

i10Index(all)

53

i10Index(since 2020)

28

Email

University Profile Page

University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Tamra C. Mendelson Skills & Research Interests

speciation

sexual selection

animal communication

Etheostoma

JEBED

Top articles of Tamra C. Mendelson

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

How Important Is Sexual Isolation to Speciation?

Kerry L Shaw

Christopher R Cooney

Tamra C Mendelson

Michael G Ritchie

Natalie S Roberts

...

2024/2/12

Comparative analysis reveals assortative mate preferences in darters independent of sympatry and sex

Yseult Héjja-Brichard

Julien Renoult

Tamra Mendelson

2023/11/9

Using generative artificial intelligence to test hypotheses about animal signal evolution: A case study in an ornamented fish

Yseult Héjja-Brichard

Kara Million

Julien P Renoult

Tamra C Mendelson

2023/11/9

Could sexual selection be driven by the mistaken inferences of young females?

PLoS Biology

Tamra C Mendelson

Gail L Patricelli

Eileen A Hebets

2023/10/4

From natural to sexual selection: Revealing a hidden preference for camouflage patterns

bioRxiv

Yseult Hejja Brichard

Michel Raymond

Innes C Cuthill

Tamra C Mendelson

Julien P Renoult

2023/9/29

Using Neural Style Transfer to study the evolution of animal signal design: A case study in an ornamented fish

bioRxiv

Yseult Héjja-Brichard

Kara Million

Julien P Renoult

Tamra C Mendelson

2023/3/13

Sparsity in an artificial neural network predicts beauty: Towards a model of processing-based aesthetics

PLOS Computational Biology

Nicolas M Dibot

Sonia Tieo

Tamra C Mendelson

William Puech

Julien P Renoult

2023/12/4

Body size is not correlated with the evolution of male coloration in darters (Percidae: Etheostomatinae)

Biological Journal of the Linnean Society

Patrick J Ciccotto

Tamra C Mendelson

2022/7/1

Sex and design in our evolutionary cousins: The perception of beauty in nature

Mètode Revista de difusió de la investigació

Tamra C Mendelson

Michael J Ryan

2022/4

Using deep neural networks to model similarity between visual patterns: Application to fish sexual signals

Ecological Informatics

Samuel V Hulse

Julien P Renoult

Tamra C Mendelson

2022/3/1

Mate preference in sympatric and allopatric darters (genus Etheostoma): comparative evidence for a sex effect in reinforcement

Yseult Héjja-Brichard

Julien P Renoult

Tamra C Mendelson

France Occitanie

2022/12/7

Speciation by sexual selection: 20 years of progress

Tamra C Mendelson

Rebecca J Safran

2021/12/1

Identifying female phenotypes that promote behavioral isolation in a sexually dimorphic species of fish Etheostoma zonale

Current Zoology

Natalie S Roberts

Tamra C Mendelson

2021/4/1

Male preference for conspecific females depends on male size in the splendid darter, Etheostoma barrenense

Animal behaviour

Courtney L Mattson

Natalie S Roberts

Tamra C Mendelson

2020/7/1

Sexual signaling pattern correlates with habitat pattern in visually ornamented fishes

Nature communications

Samuel V Hulse

Julien P Renoult

Tamra C Mendelson

2020/5/22

Reinforcement in the banded darter Etheostoma zonale: The effect of sex and sympatry on preferences

Ecology and Evolution

Natalie S Roberts

Tamra C Mendelson

2020/3

Male rainbow darters (Etheostoma caeruleum) prefer larger conspecific females

Behavioural processes

Olivia Soudry

Hatib Kaira

Shabnam Parsa

Tamra Mendelson

2020/1/1

See List of Professors in Tamra C. Mendelson University(University of Maryland, Baltimore County)