D
Dimitri Neaux
Researcher at University of Poitiers
Publications - 20
Citations - 232
Dimitri Neaux is an academic researcher from University of Poitiers. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Captivity. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications receiving 167 citations. Previous affiliations of Dimitri Neaux include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of New England (Australia).
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Journal ArticleDOI
The mark of captivity: plastic responses in the ankle bone of a wild ungulate (Sus scrofa).
Hugo Harbers,Dimitri Neaux,Katia Ortiz,Barbara Blanc,Flavie Laurens,Isabelle Baly,Cécile Callou,Renate Schafberg,Ashleigh Haruda,François Lecompte,François Casabianca,Jacqueline Studer,Sabrina Renaud,Raphaël Cornette,Yann Locatelli,Jean-Denis Vigne,Anthony Herrel,Thomas Cucchi +17 more
TL;DR: It is found that mobility reduction induces a plastic response beyond the shape variation of wild boars in their natural habitat, associated with a reduction in the range of locomotor behaviours and muscle loads.
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Basicranium and face: Assessing the impact of morphological integration on primate evolution
Dimitri Neaux,Gabriele Sansalone,Justin A. Ledogar,Sarah Heins Ledogar,Theodora H. Y. Luk,Stephen Wroe +5 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that morphological integration impacted shape disparity through time, and it is found that endocranial volume and positional behavior are important drivers of cranial shape evolution, partly affected by Morphological integration.
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Covariation between midline cranial base, lateral basicranium, and face in modern humans and chimpanzees: a 3D geometric morphometric analysis.
TL;DR: It is shown that in modern humans the basicranium is formed of two modules: the midline cranial base and the lateral basicranial shape, which are integrated with the face in very different ways.
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Morphological integration of the cranium in Homo, Pan, and Hylobates and the evolution of hominoid facial structures.
TL;DR: Results confirm that hominoids share similar patterns of integration in face and basicranial structures in two hominid genera and a hylobatid genus, in line with the hypothesis that morphological integration is mostly conservative in hominoids.
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How Changes in Functional Demands Associated with Captivity Affect the Skull Shape of a Wild Boar ( Sus scrofa )
Dimitri Neaux,Dimitri Neaux,Barbara Blanc,Katia Ortiz,Yann Locatelli,Flavie Laurens,Isabelle Baly,Cécile Callou,François Lecompte,Raphaël Cornette,Gabriele Sansalone,Gabriele Sansalone,Ashleigh Haruda,Renate Schafberg,Jean-Denis Vigne,Vincent Debat,Anthony Herrel,Thomas Cucchi +17 more
TL;DR: The craniofacial changes in wild boar associated with a lifetime of growth in captivity under conditions of controlled mobility and diet are investigated, corroborating the fundamental role of biomechanical loading and constructional constraints in the skull shape changes associated with captivity.