selected publications
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academic article
- Breastfeeding Beyond 12 Months: Is There Evidence for Health Impacts?. Annual Review of Nutrition. 2021
- Variation in Human Milk Composition Is Related to Differences in Milk and Infant Fecal Microbial Communities. Microorganisms. 9:1153. 2021
- Key genetic variants associated with variation of milk oligosaccharides from diverse human populations. Genomics. 113:1867-1875. 2021
- Comparison of Two Approaches for the Metataxonomic Analysis of the Human Milk Microbiome. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. 11:622550. 2021
- Multipathogen Analysis of IgA and IgG Antigen Specificity for Selected Pathogens in Milk Produced by Women From Diverse Geographical Regions: The INSPIRE Study. Frontiers in Immunology. 11:614372. 2021
- Characterization of SARS-CoV-2 RNA, Antibodies, and Neutralizing Capacity in Milk Produced by Women with COVID-19. MBio. 12:e03192-20. 2021
- Breastfeeding Beyond 12 Months: Is There Evidence for Health Impacts?. Annual Review of Nutrition. 41.0:283-308. 2021
- What's Normal? Microbiomes in Human Milk and Infant Feces Are Related to Each Other but Vary Geographically: The INSPIRE Study. Frontiers in Nutrition. 7. 2020
- SARS-CoV-2 and human milk: What is the evidence?. Maternal and Child Nutrition. e13032. 2020
- Household Composition and the Infant Fecal Microbiome: The INSPIRE Study. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 169:526-539. 2019
- Social networks, cooperative breeding, and the human milk microbiome. American Journal of Human Biology. e23131. 2018
- What's Normal? Immune Profiling of Human Milk from Healthy Women Living in Different Geographical and Socioeconomic Settings. Frontiers in Immunology. 8.0. 2017
- What's normal? Oligosaccharide concentrations and profiles in milk produced by healthy women vary geographically. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 105.0:1086.0-1100.0. 2017
- What's Normal? Microbiomes in Human Milk and Infant Feces Are Related to Each Other but Vary Geographically: The INSPIRE Study. Frontiers in Nutrition. 6. 0209
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chapter
- An Evolutionary, Biosocial Perspective on Variation in Human Milk Microbes and Oligosaccharides: An Example of Eco-Homeorhesis?. Prebiotics and Probiotics in Human Milk: Origins and Functions of Milk-borne Oligosaccharides and Bacteria. Academic Press. 367-399. 2017