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10 events found.

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  • September 2019

  • Mon 30
    September 30, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Kristi Lewton – Birth, bipedalism, and the evolution of the human hip

    Kristi Lewton: University of Southern CaliforniaLocomotion, gestation, and childbirth have had a significant impact on human culture and biology, including the morphology of the human hip. One of the most […]

  • October 2019

  • Mon 7
    October 7, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Brooke Scelza – Husband, Lover, Pater, Genitor: Paternity and concurrency in northwest Namibia

    Brooke Scelza: University of California, Los AngelesResearch on human mate preferences has been conducted mainly in industrialized societies, where multiple mating and concurrent partnerships are heavily stigmatized. However, cross-culturally, extra-pair […]

  • Mon 14
    October 14, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Lynette Shaw – Cognition, Culture, and Complexity: Modeling the Emergence of Shared Social Realities from Individual Mental Representation

    Lynette Shaw: University of MichiganThe cultures we belong to affect far more than our practices and beliefs - they also fundamentally shape how we perceive the world, each other, and […]

  • Mon 21
    October 21, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Terry Deacon – On Human (Symbolic) Nature: How the Word Became Flesh.

    Terry Deacon: University of California, BerkeleyAbstract: The concept of human nature has been challenged by social scientists because of its inability to clearly delineate the distinction between the biologically inherited […]

  • Mon 28
    October 28, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Tao Gao – Modeling Theory of Mind for Competition, Cooperation and Communication

    Tao Gao: University of California, Los AngelesTheory of mind (ToM) refers to the attribution of an agent’s motion to its mental states, including belief, desire and intention. Modeling ToM is […]

  • November 2019

  • Mon 4
    November 4, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Johanna Eckert – The Evolutionary Roots of Intuitive Statistics

    Johanna Eckert: University of California, Los AngelesIntuitive statistics is the capacity to draw intuitive probabilistic inferences based on an understanding of the relations between populations, sampling processes, and resulting samples. […]

  • Mon 25
    November 25, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Caitlin O’Connell – The costs and benefits of sociality explored in the semi-solitary orangutan

    Caitlin O'Connell: University of Southern CaliforniaSocial relationships are an integral part of primate life for humans and non-humans alike, but the extent to which a primate devotes its time and […]

  • December 2019

  • Mon 2
    December 2, 2019 @ 12:00 am

    Max Kleiman-Weiner – Reverse Engineering Human Cooperation

    Max Kleiman-Weiner: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyHuman cooperation is distinctly powerful. We collaborate with others to accomplish together what none of us could do on our own; we share the benefits […]

  • January 2020

  • Mon 27
    January 27, 2020 @ 12:00 am

    Rafael Nuñez – Is there really a biologically evolved capacity for number? Quantical vs. numerical cognition and the biological enculturation hypothesis

    Rafael Nuñez: University of California San DiegoIs there a biologically endowed capacity specific for number and arithmetic? A widely accepted view in cognitive neuroscience, child psychology, and animal cognition gives […]

  • February 2020

  • Mon 3
    February 3, 2020 @ 12:00 am

    Josh Armstrong – The Social Origins of Universal Grammar

    Josh Armstrong: UCLAContemporary linguistic theory takes the generative features of language use as a central focus of study. Many linguists—most notably Noam Chomsky—have maintained that explaining these generative features of […]

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