of
Stenocybus acidentatus. In 1997, Cheng & Li described the small dinocephalian
Stenocybus acidentatus, from a complete skull (IGCAGS V 361) and jaw remains from a second specimen, found in the same site as
Sinophoneus. Although in their article, Cheng and Li did not compare
Stenocybus directly with
Sinophoneus, they consider the first sufficiently different from Anteosauridae to place it in a new family, the Stenocybusidae. The name of this clade was later correctly modified in Stenocybidae by the Russian paleontologist Mikhail Feodosievich Ivakhnenko. The latter was also the first researcher to suggest that
Stenocybus could be the juvenile form of
Sinophoneus. In 2011, Christian Kammerer also considered
Stenocybus as a young
Sinophoneus, the proportions of the first (absence of
pachyostosis, tall and narrow skull, relatively large orbits, and smaller
temporal fenestra) being typical characters of juvenile therapids. In addition, the immature skull of
Stenocybus already shows a beginning of the median ridge of the snout characteristic of
Sinophoneus, as well as the same bulbous profile of the snout as in the latter. As a result, Kammerer regards
Stenocybus acidentatus as a
junior synonym of
Sinophoneus yumenensis. In 2014, Jiang and Ji described two new specimens of
Stenocybus: a snout with articulated jaws, and a right dentary with an almost complete dentition, belonging to two individuals slightly larger than the holotype. Although providing new information on the anatomy of the animal, such as the number of teeth on the mandible, Jiang and Ji believe that the phylogenetic position of
Stenocybus remains difficult to confirm, and that the synonymy of
Stenocybus with
Sinophoneus proposed by Kammerer, Liu and Li must be proved by the discovery of more complete specimens. However, Jiang and Ji's wishes had been realize a few months earlier. In 2013 Liu described the seven new skulls of
Sinophoneus (including one associated with postcranial remains) that had only been mentioned in the short note of 2011. These skulls all belong to specimens smaller than the holotype, but they represent various
ontogenetic stages. They confirm that the skulls of
Stenocybus actually represent several juvenile stages of
Sinophoneus. ==Ontogeny==