• UCLA
  • College
  • Social Sciences
Give Now
Center for Behavior, Evolution, and Culture
  • Speaker Series
    • Past Presentations
    • Upcoming Presentations
    • Archive (Pre-2003)
  • People
  • News
  • Events
    • Posters
  • Get Involved
    • Support
    • Resources
  • Contact
  • Biological Anthropology at UCLA
    • Our Faculty
    • Our Ph.D Program
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
10 events found.

Events Search and Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

  • List
  • Month
  • Day
Today
  • May 2013

  • Mon 13
    May 13, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Claire White – Evolutionizing Bereavement Research: Toward an Integrated Account of Human Grief

    Claire White : California State University, NorthridgeGrief is a universal reaction to the loss of a valued relationship partner. Two main evolutionary accounts of grief have been proposed. The first […]

  • Wed 15
    May 15, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Steven Stroessner – Confronting Threat When Safety Concerns are Paramount

    Steven Stroessner: Barnard College, Columbia UniversityMotivations are generally concerned with maintaining safety (prevention) or ensuring advancement (promotion) (Regulatory focus theory; Higgins, 1997). Four experiments examined whether information implying imminent threat […]

  • Mon 20
    May 20, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Monique Borgerhoff-Mulder – Responding to Inequality: Cooperation, Kinship and Witchcraft in Mpimbwe, Tanzania

    Monique Borgerhoff-Mulder: University of California, DavisWhile the causes, transmission and consequences of material and social inequality are well studied in the social sciences, the ways in which people respond to […]

  • June 2013

  • Mon 3
    June 3, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Matthew Gervais – Mapping an egalitarian hierarchy: relational economic games tap RICH norms of helping and leveling in a Fijian village

    Matthew Gervais: The University of California, Los AngelesExperimental economic games have shed significant light on human population variation in social behavior. However, most of these games have involved anonymous dyadic […]

  • September 2013

  • Mon 30
    September 30, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Lee Cronk – Our cultural immune system: Toward a theory of culture’s influence on behavior

    Lee Cronk: Rutgers University Department of AnthropologyAnthropologists are rarely able to predict when a culture trait will influence behavior and when it will not. The theory of gene-culture coevolution leads […]

  • October 2013

  • Mon 7
    October 7, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Richard McElreath – The endogenous Dorito: The cultural evolution of evolutionary mismatch

    Richard McElreath: UC Davis Department of AnthropologyIt's common for evolutionary psychologists to invoke evolutionary mismatch as an explanation for maladaptive human behavior. For example, people eat themselves to death, because […]

  • Mon 14
    October 14, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    David Nolin – What goes around comes around? Cyclicity as a statistical test of generalized reciprocity in social network data.

    David Nolin: Boise State University Department of AnthropologyGeneralized (indirect) reciprocity is characterized by giving to other group members without regard to direct reciprocation from those same recipients, with the costs […]

  • Thu 17
    October 17, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Andrew Gersick – Courtship Signaling in a Social Context: What Flirting and “Flirting” May Do for Humans, Birds and Others.

    Andrew Gersick: University of Pennsylvania Department of Animal BehaviorSexual selection is widely understood through the lens of the peacock’s tail – as the evolutionary driver shaping elaborate courtship displays and […]

  • Mon 21
    October 21, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Eli Berman – Predation, Taxation, Investment and Violence: Evidence from the Philippines

    Eli Berman: UCSD Department of Economics This paper explores the relationship between investment and political violence through several possible mechanisms. Investment as a predictor of future violence implies that low […]

  • Mon 28
    October 28, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Karen Kramer – When Mothers Need Others. The Evolution of Parenting, Childhood & Cooperation

    Karen Kramer: University of Utah Department of Human Evolutionary Biology Human life histories differ from those of other closely related species in ways that significantly affect parental care and childhood. […]

  • Previous Events
  • Today
  • Next Events
  • Google Calendar
  • iCalendar
  • Outlook 365
  • Outlook Live
  • Export .ics file
  • Export Outlook .ics file
Scroll to top