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Robert Olendorf

Researcher at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

Publications -  16
Citations -  494

Robert Olendorf is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Data curation & Metaverse. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 461 citations.

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Frequency-dependent survival in natural guppy populations.

TL;DR: This study manipulated the frequencies of males with different colour patterns in three natural populations to estimate survival rates, and found that rare phenotypes had a highly significant survival advantage compared to common phenotypes.

Preserving Virtual Worlds Final Report

TL;DR: The primary goals of the project have been to investigate issues surrounding the preservation of video games and interactive fiction through a series of case studies of games and literature from various periods in computing history, and to develop basic standards for metadata and content representation of these digital artifacts for long-term archival storage.
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Inbreeding depression and inbreeding avoidance in a natural population of guppies (Poecilia reticulata).

TL;DR: These results provide substantial insight into mating patterns of a wild guppy population: strong inbreeding depression occurs, and individuals tend to avoid mating with relatives.
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Data Curation Network: A Cross-Institutional Staffing Model for Curating Research Data

TL;DR: The DCN implementation plan includes a well-coordinated and tiered staffing model, a technology-agnostic submission workflow, standardized curation procedures, and a sustainability approach that will allow the DCN to prevail beyond the grant-supported implementation phase as a curation-as-service model.
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Primers for 12 polymorphic microsatellite DNA loci from the guppy (Poecilia reticulata)

TL;DR: Allele frequencies differed substantially between populations suggesting divergence, and all the loci were polymorphic although there were considerable differences among loci and populations in allele frequencies.