Dan Blumstein – The Sound of Fear

Dan Blumstein: University of California, Los AngelesWhat makes certain sounds scary? I will describe insights gained from over three decades of studying alarm calls and fear screams in marmots (which are large, mostly-alpine, ground squirrels) throughout the northern hemisphere. Fear screams are remarkably similar across taxa and they seem to be particularly evocative to many […]

Angela Garcia – The Embodiment of Stress: Do diurnal cortisol-immune interactions and parasitic infection moderate social influences on health among immigrant women on Utila?

Angela Garcia: Arizona State University Cardiometabolic diseases (e.g. heart disease and diabetes) are the leading cause of death and morbidity worldwide. Diabetes, for example, will double in the next 30 years, with 80% of the rise occurring in middle and lower- income countries. Social, economic, and ecological landscapes often change alongside market integration and development, […]

Nandita Garud – The Bacteria Evolving Within Us

Nandita Garud: University of California, Los AngelesThe human gut microbiome is comprised of a complex ecosystem of microbes that reside inside of us and play an important role in our health. With as many as a billion new mutations entering our microbiomes per day, bacterial genomes inside us have a great opportunity to evolve rapidly, […]

Courtney Meehan – [CANCELED] The social worlds of infants, moms, and microbes

Courtney Meehan: Washington State University Throughout our evolutionary history, and in much of the world today, human infancy has been characterized by a host of ancestral traits which include frequent maternal-infant contact, on-demand breastfeeding, co-sleeping, and cooperative breeding. These ancestral characteristics have, in part, supported the development of our altricial infants and enabled reproductive success […]

Melanie Martin – Human infant feeding: evolved strategies, individual optimums, and public health

Melanie Martin: University of WashingtonAcross past and present human populations, breastfeeding and weaning practices have been demonstrably varied. Though this variation is largely influenced by ecological and socioeconomic factors, comparative primate and human biological and cross-cultural evidence further suggests that flexible mixed-feeding is an evolved human strategy. In this talk, I review the differences in […]

Josh Snodgrass – Life history tradeoffs between childhood growth and immune function among Shuar forager-horticulturalists of Amazonian Ecuador

Josh Snodgrass: University of OregonImmune function is an energetically costly physiological activity that can divert calories and other resources away from less immediately essential life history functions such as growth. However, direct evidence for immune-related tradeoffs among humans remains sparse. In this talk, I discuss longitudinal research among Shuar children (4-11 years old) that uses […]

Dan Hruschka – What does it mean to replicate studies in a cultural species?

Dan Hruschka: Arizona State University Replicating a study among our fellow humans requires a researcher to interact with study participants according to protocols that are comparable with previous studies. However, thanks to humanity’s rich capacity for cultural learning, it can be challenging to identify what counts as a “comparable protocol” across different human groups. Specifically, […]

Raziel Davison – Evolutionary Retrospectives on the Human Life History Trajectory

Raziel Davison: University of California, Santa Barbara We investigate human life history evolution by comparing smallscale subsistence societies and chimpanzees to identify the roles that fertility and mortality play in driving population-level fitness differences. We discuss differences in the selection pressures facing individuals of different ages and to make inferences about the trajectory of human […]

Ashley Hazel – Ecological dynamics of sexually transmitted infections among Namibian pastoralists

Ashley Hazel: Stanford UniversityPopulations that are dependent upon physical environments for their immediate livelihoods utilize subsistence strategies that are both well adapted to predictable environmental variability (e.g., seasonality) and resilient to unpredictable shocks (e.g., drought). Livelihood strategies that entail high degrees of mobility typically have temporal and spatial heterogeneities in social contact, which influences infection […]

Alexandra Binder – Epigenetics and the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

Alexandra Binder: University of California, Los AngelesThere is extensive epidemiologic and experimental evidence linking early life conditions to adult health. Epigenetic modifications are suspected to play a role in mediating these associations by providing a cellular memory of gene regulation shaped by exposures during critical windows of development. In this lecture, I will discuss some […]