Persistence and reversibility of wild animal welfare interventions

June 30, 2020

From the organizers of EAGxVirtual 2020:

"When we try to improve wild animal welfare, we want the effects of our efforts to persist long into the future, rather than to wash out. However, we also want to maintain the ability to undo our actions if they turn out to be harmful. In this talk, Simon Liedholm of Wild Animal Initiative outlines how we can optimize these two objectives, and apply the framework to some specific examples.”

Simon Eckerström Liedholm

Simon is a Researcher at Wild Animal Initiative. Simon completed his PhD at the Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, focusing on the relationship between life history and behavior, physiology, and morphology among different species of fish. He has both interest and experience in Bayesian statistics, and has taught statistics for several years to graduate and undergraduate students. Simon is located in Stockholm.

simon.liedholm@wildanimalinitiative.org.


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