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10 events found.

Events

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  • September 2025

  • Mon 29

    Stephan Kaufhold, UCSD. Title: Situated Simian Minds: Why Context Matters for Modeling Primate Behavior

    September 29, 2025 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Unlike humans, who can maintain relationships and communities beyond temporal and spatial boundaries, nonhuman primates’ relationships are fundamentally grounded in embodied, immediate interactions. In this talk, I present two empirical studies on resource conflicts in semi-naturalistic primate groups, showing how their behavior and decision-making are best understood by considering social and ecological contexts. The first […]

  • October 2025

  • Mon 20

    Stacy Rosenbaum (Univ. Michigan) – “The long arm of “childhood:” what can other primates teach us about the early life origins of aging and resiliency?”

    October 20, 2025 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Early life experiences are widely thought to shape adult behavior, health, and fitness across the tree of life. The deep evolutionary roots of these "early life effects"—seen in organisms ranging from plants to primates—have sparked considerable interest in their biological underpinnings. While individual variation in responses to early life adversity is well recognized, new research […]

  • November 2025

  • Mon 3

    Richard Karban (UC-Davis) – Plant Communication and Individual Personalities

    November 3, 2025 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    This talk will attempt to answer three questions: 1) Do plants communicate about their risk of herbivory? 2) Do plants have individual personalities with respect to communication? 3) Why does this matter? Biologists have known for a long time that plants sense their environments and respond accordingly, i.e., they exhibit “behavior.” Whether they communicate with […]

  • Mon 17

    Bret Beheim, MPI-EVAN – “Planck’s Principle, Price’s Theorem and the Forces of Cultural Evolution” (via Zoom)

    November 17, 2025 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract: Physicist Max Planck famously said that "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die". This is basically a theory of human cultural change, one rooted primarily in the mechanisms of differential recruitment, inheritance and demography. If the Planck […]

  • December 2025

  • Mon 1

    Katie Sayre, UCSB – Title: “Loneliness and health: insights from the Tsimane Health and Life History Project”

    December 1, 2025 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract: Loneliness as a public health concern has exploded in recent years. Recognition of its widespread prevalence and presumed recency have led to declarations that a “loneliness epidemic” faces industrialized populations. Changes to certain aspects of modern life—fewer face-to-face interactions, more time spent alone, more people living by themselves—are thought to exacerbate loneliness, and imply […]

  • January 2026

  • Mon 5

    Delaney Knorr, Duke University — Title: Evolutionary Constraints on Human Pregnancy: How Social Environments and Energetic Limits Shape Maternal-Fetal Health

    January 5 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract: Human pregnancy is an energetically demanding and socially embedded process that requires mothers to balance competing physiological needs while maintaining fetal development. In this talk, I integrate biocultural and mechanistic approaches to examine how social, ecological, and energetic environments become biologically embedded during gestation. Drawing on mixed-methods research with Latina women in the U.S., […]

  • Mon 26

    Katie Starkweather, UCSB. Title: Climate Change, Women’s Work, and Child Health in Bangladeshi Shodagor Communities

    January 26 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract: Climate change is a growing threat to population health globally, with infants and young children living in low income and lower-and-middle income countries at particularly high risk of experiencing health and nutritional challenges. The sources of these challenges include alterations to breastfeeding practices, decreased access to food, due to lower crop and fishing yields and higher […]

  • February 2026

  • Mon 9

    Amy Non, Dept of Anthropology, UCSD. Title: Novel markers of stress in early life: sex ratios, preterm births, and milk miRNAs. Via Zoom

    February 9 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract: The theory of developmental origins of health and disease predicts pregnancy and infancy to be sensitive early periods of development with long term impacts on trajectories of growth and health across the life course. At a population level, preterm births have been linked to stressful group events, including natural disasters and sociopolitical stressors. Similarly, […]

  • Mon 23

    Greg Grether, EEB, UCLA, Title: Behavioral interference between species

    February 23 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Aggression and reproductive interference are common forms of behavioral interference between closely related species. These interactions often arise as incidental byproducts of everyday activities such as defending resources or competing for mates. Yet, although they resemble familiar within-species behaviors, their ecological and evolutionary consequences can be quite different when they occur between species. Behavioral interference […]

  • March 2026

  • Mon 9

    Olympia Campbell, Institute for Advanced Studies, Toulouse. Title: Cousin marriage, women’s welfare, and accelerated family formation

    March 9 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
    352 Haines Hall

    Abstract:Cousin marriage, practised by over 10% of the world's population, restructures kinship networks by overlapping blood and affinal ties. Theory makes competing predictions about how this affects women. "Protection" accounts argue that consanguinity aligns spouses' interests and increases kin oversight, reducing coercion. "Constraint" accounts emphasise that dense kin involvement can prioritise family cohesion over women's […]

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