me

Paul A. Hohenlohe

Home --- Research --- CV --- Publications --- Software --- Other Cool Stuff


Contact me...

Department of Zoology
3029 Cordley Hall
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR  97331-2914
email

or

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
5289 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR  97403-5289
email









































© 2007 Paul Hohenlohe
Document made with Nvu
[best viewed with anything but Internet Explorer]


Welcome!

I am an evolutionary biologist and postdoctoral researcher with Steve Arnold at Oregon State University and Bill Cresko at the University of Oregon.  My research addresses the broad question of how the structure of genetic variation shapes, and is shaped by, the trajectories of evolution.  To learn more, click here.

What's new:

[Mar 4, 2009]  Our paper on reproductive isolation by drift in a sexual selection context is in print -- pdf available here.

[Oct 22, 2008]
 Our commentary on G-matrix evolution and stability is in print here, and supplementary information on empirical comparisons among matrices is here.

[Sep 22, 2008]
 A novel genetic network model, developed by a couple colleagues and me, is out in PLoS ONE.

[Sep 14, 2008]
 Check out our note on estimating quadratic selection gradients here.

[Aug 11, 2008]
 A minor update to MIPoD 1.0 is available, fixing a small issue with ordering of eigenvectors.  If you download the source code, note that both the main file and the header file have been changed.  The revised user manual describes the issue.

[Mar 10, 2008]
 Another minor update to MIPoD 1.0 is online, making things run quite a bit faster.  No change to the analysis or output.

[Dec 11, 2007]  Another minor update to MIPoD 1.0 -- it runs a little faster, with no change to the analysis or output.

[Dec 7, 2007]
 Another minor update to MIPoD 1.0 -- matrix inversion procedures were improved, speeding up the analysis.  Download the new files here.

[Oct 8, 2007]
 A very minor update to MIPoD 1.0 is online.  Confidence limits are provided for epsilon estimates in the 2-trait case, as described in Hohenlohe & Arnold (in press).

[Sep 12, 2007]   MIPoD 1.0 -- the neutral module -- is available!  Feedback is welcome.  Note: Computing time increases as a relatively large power of number of traits.  If you have a large dataset and/or a slow computer, you may want to start out with 2 traits, see how it goes, and work up.

[Apr 27, 2007]  A test version of MIPoD is available!  Go check it out, and please email me any feedback you have.



OSU

UO