Davis, G. H.; Crofoot, M. C.; Farine, D. R.: Using optimal foraging theory to infer how groups make collective decisions. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 37 (11), pp. 942 - 952 (2022)
Noonan, M. J.; Martinez-Garcia, R.; Davis, G. H.; Crofoot, M. C.; Kays, R.; Hirsch, B.; Caillaud, D.; Payne, E.; Sih, A.; Sinn, D. L.et al.; Spiegel, O.; Fagan, W. F.; Fleming, C. H.; Calabrese, J. M.: Estimating encounter location distributions from animal tracking data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 12 (7), pp. 1158 - 1173 (2021)
Torrez-Herrera, L. L.; Davis, G. H.; Crofoot, M. C.: Do monkeys avoid areas of home range overlap because they are dangerous? A test of the risk hypothesis in White-Faced Capuchin Monkeys (Cebus capucinus). International Journal of Primatology 41 (2), pp. 246 - 264 (2020)
Davis, G. H.; Crofoot, M. C.; Farine, D. R.: Estimating the robustness and uncertainty of animal social networks using different observational methods. Animal Behaviour 141, pp. 29 - 44 (2018)
Davis, G. H.; Payne, E.; Sih, A.: Commentary: Four ways in which data-free papers on animal personality fail to be impactful. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 3, 102 (2015)
Why do primates have big brains? In the Panamanian rainforest, scientists pitted large-brained primates against smaller-brained mammals to find out who was the smartest forager
The first narrative nonfiction book about the pioneering animal tracking project ICARUS, written by its founder Martin Wikelski, is published by Greystone Books