Well, my analysis in the Hartman et al. (2019)
Hesperornithoides description recovered it as a compsognathid, a placement originally proposed non-quantitatively by Alifanov
and Saveliev (2011:184). Similarly, Choiniere et al. (2011) found
the braincase anatomy of parvicursorines was more similar to avialans
than to
Haplocheirus, suggesting homoplasy or alvarezsauroid
polyphyly. Among published phylogenetic analyses, Lee and Worthy
(2011) recovered
Haplocheirus as
the basalmost ornithomimosaur in their Bayesian reanalysis of a TWiG
matrix, not separated from compsognathids by a majority bootstrap
value. Agnolin et al. (2022) have since
contested Choiniere et al.'s alvarezsauroid characters in
Haplocheirus, and concluded "there are some
features reminiscent to ornithomimosaurs and different from those of
alvarezsaurs."
But no(?) analysis has recovered alvarezsauroids as paravians in the past 25 years, even when
Haplocheirus falls out elsewhere.
Alnashetri doesn't look particularly birdlike to me, although some characters are troodonty.
References- Alifanov and Saveliev, 2011. Brain structure and neurobiology of
alvarezsaurians (Dinosauria), exemplified by
Ceratonykus oculatus
(Parvicursoridae) from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. Paleontological
Journal. 45(2), 183-190.
Choiniere, Norell and Dyke, 2011. The anatomy of the parvicursorine
braincase and its implications for alvarezsauroid systematics and
evolution. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. Program and Abstracts
2011, 88.
Lee and Worthy, 2011. Likelihood reinstates
Archaeopteryx as a primitive bird.
Biology Letters. 8(2), 299-303.
Hartman, Mortimer, Wahl, Lomax, Lippincott and Lovelace, 2019. A new
paravian dinosaur from the Late Jurassic of North America supports a
late acquisition of avian flight. PeerJ. 7:e7247.
Agnolin, Lu, Kundrat and Xu, 2022 (online 2021). Alvarezsaurid
osteology: New data on cranial anatomy. Historical Biology. 34(3),
443-452.
Mickey Mortimer