Weston Perrine Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
unknown
Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Weston Perrine's research investigates host-pathogen interactions, with a focus on how diet and host characteristics influence disease pathology and transmission in avian systems. His work has explored the link between a high-lipid diet and increased pathology and reduced host tolerance during infection. Perrine has also studied how diet-driven differences in host tolerance are associated with changes in global gene expression within host-pathogen systems. Additionally, his research indicates that male pathology, irrespective of behavior, is a significant driver of transmission in an avian host-pathogen context. Perrine collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Erin L. Sauer, Sarah E. DuRant, and Ashley C. Love, with whom he shares multiple publications. His scholarly output includes 6 publications, with an h-index of 2 and 23 total citations.
Metrics
- h-index: 2
- Publications: 6
- Citations: 23
Selected Publications
-
Diet Driven Differences in Host Tolerance Are Linked to Shifts in Global Gene Expression in a Common Avian Host‐Pathogen System (2025)
-
A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection (2025)
-
Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system (2024)
-
A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection (2024)
-
Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host–pathogen system (2023)
-
Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host-pathogen system (2023)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host–pathogen system
- A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host-pathogen system
- Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system
- A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
Showing 5 of 6 shared publications
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host–pathogen system
- A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host-pathogen system
- Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system
- A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
Showing 5 of 6 shared publications
- A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system
- A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- Diet Driven Differences in Host Tolerance Are Linked to Shifts in Global Gene Expression in a Common Avian Host‐Pathogen System
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host–pathogen system
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host-pathogen system
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host–pathogen system
- Male pathology regardless of behaviour drives transmission in an avian host-pathogen system
- A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system
- Diet Driven Differences in Host Tolerance Are Linked to Shifts in Global Gene Expression in a Common Avian Host‐Pathogen System
- Diet driven differences in host tolerance are linked to shifts in global gene expression in a common avian host-pathogen system
- Diet Driven Differences in Host Tolerance Are Linked to Shifts in Global Gene Expression in a Common Avian Host‐Pathogen System
- A high lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
- A high-lipid diet leads to greater pathology and lower tolerance during infection
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics