Will Richardson Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
unknown
Research Areas
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Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Will Richardson's research focuses on the application of remote sensing technologies for ecosystem monitoring and has explored methane flux detection in agricultural settings, specifically rice fields. His work also extends to cardiovascular research, investigating the effects of sex and 17β-estradiol on cardiac fibroblast morphology and signaling in vitro. He has developed a "Heart Scar-In-A-Dish" tissue culture platform designed to study myocardial injury and mechanics. Additionally, his research includes the use of analog data to estimate relative permeability curves for drainage CO₂/brine systems. Richardson's scholarship metrics include an h-index of 2, with 6 total publications and 38 citations. He has collaborated with Benjamin R. K. Runkle and Sam Coeyman, both from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.
Metrics
- h-index: 2
- Publications: 7
- Citations: 46
Selected Publications
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Heart Scar-In-A-Dish: Tissue Culture Platform to Study Myocardial Injury and Mechanics In Vitro (2025)
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Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology (2025)
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Modification of a Wavelet-Based Method for Detecting Ebullitive Methane Fluxes in Eddy-Covariance Observations: Application at Two Rice Fields (2022)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Modification of a Wavelet-Based Method for Detecting Ebullitive Methane Fluxes in Eddy-Covariance Observations: Application at Two Rice Fields
- Effects of Sex and 17β-Estradiol on Cardiac Fibroblast Morphology and Signaling Activities <em>in vitro</em>
- Modification of a Wavelet-Based Method for Detecting Ebullitive Methane Fluxes in Eddy-Covariance Observations: Application at Two Rice Fields
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
- Proximal remote sensing: an essential tool for bridging the gap between high‐resolution ecosystem monitoring and global ecology
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