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X-WR-CALNAME:Center for Behavior, Evolution, and Culture
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://bec.ucla.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Center for Behavior, Evolution, and Culture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150309T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150309T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005129Z
UID:4304-1425859200-1425859200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:John Tooby - Political Epidemiology\, History\, and the Evolutionary Psychology of Outrage.
DESCRIPTION:John Tooby: UCSBDon’t shoot! Rodney King.  Remember the Maine. The Reichstag Fire. Guernica. The War of Jenkins Ear.  The murder of Emmet Till.  Events in which one or more members of one group injure the welfare of one or more members of another group (“outrages”) typically provoke extraordinarily strong and frequently violent responses directed more or less indiscriminately at members of the group from which the offender or offenders came.  Such events are treated entirely differently than parallel harms performed by individuals within groups.  They unleash cultural processes in which accounts of harms rapidly spread through the group the victims came from.  Generally\, as news of the (sometimes fabricated) harm is transmitted from person to person\, details are added to representations of the event so that the actions depicted seem harsher\, more intentional\, and more group-targeted.  Many group members treat inflammatory portrayals of interactions and the rage they generate as a kind of precious group resource\, becoming very resistant to contrary evidence\, and passing these stylized narratives down generations.  News of outrages strongly motivate the desire to join with others to act in a coordinated and aggressive fashion “against” the other group.  A review of the historical and ethnographic record suggests that outrages play a central role in starting wars\, provoking ethnic violence\, and in mobilizing social movements and revolutions.  The cross-culturally and cross-historically recurrent structure of these cultural and social phenomena can be understood by seeing how they naturally emerge from interactions between the evolved psychology of welfare tradeoffs\, groups\, adaptations for group coordination\, and common knowledge.  The key is that cross-group harms\, if uncontested\, are implicitly seen as proposing a common knowledge precedent for the degree of social domination or subordination. The psychology of outrages can be seen as a parallel and complementary adaptation to leadership—one way of solving the coordination problem of mobilizing group members to effectively act or bargain in conflicts with outgroups.  Because it is normally difficult to get individuals to set aside competing agendas within groups\, yet group power increases with coordination\, outrages (real or fabricated) become a resource ingroup individuals strategically deploy to mobilize joint action they (as individuals) expect to benefit from.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/john-tooby-political-epidemiology-history-and-the-evolutionary-psychology-of-outrage/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150304T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150304T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4301-1425427200-1425427200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Eduardo Fernandez-Duque - The Importance of Food\, Jealousy\, and Paternal Care in the Evolution of Owl Monkey Monogamy
DESCRIPTION:Eduardo Fernandez-Duque: Yale UniversityI will discuss published and new data from a population of monogamous owl monkeys in the Argentinean Chaco that we have been studying for almost 20 years to examine the hypothesis that social monogamy is a default social system imposed upon males because the spatial and/or temporal distribution of resources and females makes it difficult for a single male to defend access to more than one mate. Over the years we have tested predictions on ranging patterns\, use of space\, population density and the abundance and distribution of food. We have also examined the extent to which the ranging and ecological data allow us to predict demographic and life-history parameters as proxies for reproductive success.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/eduardo-fernandez-duque-the-importance-of-food-jealousy-and-paternal-care-in-the-evolution-of-owl-monkey-monogamy/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150302T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150302T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4300-1425254400-1425254400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Ben Trumble - Surviving the Flood:  Risk Management\, Resilience\, and the Endocrine and Health Impacts of Natural Disaster in a Subsistence Population
DESCRIPTION:Ben Trumble: UCSBIn February 2014\, catastrophic flooding impacted the Tsimane forager-horticulturalists of lowland Bolivia. Flooding decimated the subsistence lifestyle and more than two-thirds of villages were flooded (completely destroying crops and washing away most possessions); thousands fled to the nearby market town of San Borja.  Widespread food insecurity and disease followed.  This project examines the immediate impacts of catastrophic flooding on a subsistence population with limited support from formal institutions (e.g. government\, NGO’s\, insurance firms) characteristic of Industrial populations.  In a sample of more than 400 families this study examines acute effects of disaster and crop/material losses on behavior\, psychosocial stress\, endocrine physiology\, and health.  We find a 2.6 fold increase in anemia and 2.4 fold increase in high white blood cell counts following the flood\, as well as a nearly a one unit decrease in body mass index (BMI).  Individuals with higher levels of crop loss were more present oriented in a time discounting task\, and family illness predicted whether individuals moved the locations of their homes and fields homes following the flood.  Natural disasters impact all populations\, yet rural\, indigenous populations are particularly vulnerable. Understanding factors promoting resilience in a population with limited schooling\, material wealth\, or access to modern healthcare is an important goal\, as much of the world’s population lives in extreme poverty.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/ben-trumble-surviving-the-flood-risk-management-resilience-and-the-endocrine-and-health-impacts-of-natural-disaster-in-a-subsistence-population/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150223T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150223T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220053Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4299-1424649600-1424649600@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Corina Logan - How New Caledonian Crows Learn About and Solve Foraging Problems
DESCRIPTION:Corina Logan: UCSBNew Caledonian crows are one of the few species that make and use tools in the wild. Tool types differ across their range in an overlapping pattern\, suggesting that tool designs are copied with a high fidelity and may be transmitted across generations\, thus allowing for cumulative changes to occur to the lineage of each tool type over time (cumulative technological culture hypothesis). However\, little is known about how these crows learn to make such tools\, how this information is transmitted to others\, or what they know about the problems they solve. I present results from two experiments on wild-caught New Caledonian crows examining what information observers attend to\, how social information is transmitted among juveniles and adults\, and whether they attend to causal information when solving foraging problems.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/corina-logan-how-new-caledonian-crows-learn-about-and-solve-foraging-problems/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150209T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150209T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4294-1423440000-1423440000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Federico Rossano - The Emergence of Property Concerns in Ontogeny and Phylogeny
DESCRIPTION:Federico Rossano: Max Plank InstituteSocial theorists as diverse as Locke\, Hume\, Rousseau\, and Marx have suggested that without the institution of property modern civil society would not exist. All human societies care about ownership of at least some kinds of things (Brown\, 1991; Hann\, 1998)\, yet young children struggle to understand property and come only gradually to an understanding of ownership and how it may be legitimately transferred. Little is known about non-human primates understanding of property\, in that they appear to have a sense of possession and will fight to protect the food that is in their physical control (Kummer & Cords\, 1991; Sigg & Falett\, 1985)\, but there is currently no evidence that they have any sense of ownership (i.e.\, they would respect others’ property even when they are absent) (Brosnan\, 2011). In this talk I present a series of studies on preschoolers investigating their understanding of (i) under which conditions who owns what (call them ‘‘conditions of ownership’’ rules)\, and (ii) what implications (rights\, commitments\, entitlements\, etc.) owning which objects carries under which conditions (call them ‘‘implications of ownership’’ rules). I will then present some additional studies investigating the role played by communication and cooperation in the sustainability of property as a social institution. I will finally compare the behavior of preschoolers and non-human primates in situations testing their tendency to respect other individuals’ properties and to protest when their property is violated.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/federico-rossano-the-emergence-of-property-concerns-in-ontogeny-and-phylogeny/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150202T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150202T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4297-1422835200-1422835200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:David Funder - The World at Seven: Comparing Situations Across 19 Countries with Riverside Situational Q-sort
DESCRIPTION:David Funder: UC RiversideBehavior is a function of the person and the situation\, and understanding the “personality triad” of persons\, situations and behaviors requires assessment instruments for all three. However\, until recently tools for assessing situations were not available. The Riverside Situational Q-sort (RSQ) was developed to fill this gap\, and has been applied in the study of cross-situational consistency in behavior\, and also used to operationalize and test implications of situational types posited by evolutionary theory. Most recently\, The International Situations Project was begun as the first attempt to quantitatively compare everyday situational experience across cultures. Collaborators from 19 cultures directed college student participants (total N = 3\,287) to a website (www.internationalsituationsproject.com) where\, using the 89 items of the Riverside Situational Q-sort (RSQ)\, they described the situation they experienced the previous evening at 7 pm. The average situational Q-sort profile for each culture was compared with all others. The most similar cultures were USA/Canada\, and the least similar cultures were Korea/Denmark\, Korea/Estonia\, and Estonia/Australia. The culture with the most similar situational experience to the others\, overall\, was Canada; the most distinctive was South Korea. The RSQ item that varied the most across cultures was “People are disagreeing about something” (Czech Republic highest; Japan lowest); the second least varying item was “Members of the opposite sex are present.” In general\, the items that varied the most across cultures described negative aspects of situational experience; the least varying items were more positive. The RSQ is shown to be versatile tool for assessing situations in diverse research contexts.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/david-funder-the-world-at-seven-comparing-situations-across-19-countries-with-riverside-situational-q-sort/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150126T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150126T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4298-1422230400-1422230400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Henrike Moll - Social Motivation and Cognition in Toddlers: Their Demands of Reciprocity and Affective Anticipations of Others’ Misguided Actions
DESCRIPTION:Henrike Moll: USCHumans are an extraordinarily social species. Their unique way of relating to one another becomes evident very early in ontogeny. In this talk\, I will present two lines of experiments\, both of which exemplify toddlers’ attunement to other persons and their awareness of others’ perceptual and epistemic states. In one line of experiments\, we found that toddlers negate another person’s visibility when her eyes are occluded. Toddlers’ willingness to deny the other’s visibility was positively correlated with their knowledge of the pronoun ‘each other’—suggesting that children who reliably distinguish between reciprocal and individual acts are particularly demanding of reciprocity. In the second line of experiments\, we approached the problem of false belief understanding in a novel way by assessing children’s facial expressions. We found that by the age of 2.5 years\, toddlers affectively express suspense when observing how an agent acts on misguided assumptions. Both lines of experiments demonstrate impressive social motivational and social cognitive facts: Toddlers demand reciprocal perception in face-to-face encounters\, and they are touched and moved when others actions are misguided. The results will be interpreted with a theoretical framework that is inspired by Vygotsky.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/henrike-moll-social-motivation-and-cognition-in-toddlers-their-demands-of-reciprocity-and-affective-anticipations-of-others-misguided-actions/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150112T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150112T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005130Z
UID:4296-1421020800-1421020800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Gregory Clark - Nature versus Nurture in the Inheritance of Social Status
DESCRIPTION:Gregory Clark: UC DavisMost work studying the inheritance of aspects of social status across societies suggests two things. The first is that this inheritance is weak. Most social status for people is not determined by inheritance from parents. The second is that the strength of inheritance of status varies markedly across societies\, so that status inheritance must be largely socially determined. In recent work using surnames as a means of measuring status inheritance across as many as twenty generations we show that in practice status inheritance is very strong\, and that it varies surprisingly little across the societies and social systems. In this talk I propose that these surname results are compatible with genetics being the principle determinant of social status in most societies.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/gregory-clark-nature-versus-nurture-in-the-inheritance-of-social-status/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150105T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150105T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4295-1420416000-1420416000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Thom Scott-Phillips - The Evolution of Human Communication and Language
DESCRIPTION:Thom Scott-Phillips: Durham UniversityLanguage is arguably humanity’s most distinctive characteristic. What\, exactly\, is language\, and why are we the only species that has it?  In this talk\, based upon my recent book*\, I will argue that the differences between human communication and the communication systems of all other species is probably not a difference of degree\, but rather one of kind. Language is a system made possible by mechanisms of metapsychology\, and expressively powerful by mechanisms of association. Non-human primate communication is most likely the opposite: made possible by mechanisms of association\, and expressively powerful by mechanisms of metapsychology. This conclusion suggests that human communication\, and hence language\, evolved as a by-product of increased social intelligence. As such\, human communication may be best seen\, from an evolutionary perspective\, as a particularly sophisticated form of social cognition: mutually-assisted mindreading and mental manipulation.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/thom-scott-phillips-the-evolution-of-human-communication-and-language/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141208T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141208T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4293-1417996800-1417996800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Simone Schnall - Social and Physiological Resources and the Perception of Space
DESCRIPTION:Simone Schnall: University of CambridgeTraditional theories of perception have assumed that visual processing is not influenced by top-down cognitive processes and is thus driven entirely by physical properties of the environment (Pylyshyn\, 1984). For example\, how a person sees stimuli such as a cup of coffee or a steep hill was thought to be only determined by factors such as the roughness of their surface and the amount of light entering the eye. However\, recent research has shown that perception of space is also influenced by different bodily and experiential factors. I will review our recent work to suggest that perceptual processes take into account social and physiological resources\, and that therefore perception of the world is a reflection of the extent to which one can act in it.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/simone-schnall-social-and-physiological-resources-and-the-perception-of-space/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141201T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141201T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4292-1417392000-1417392000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Larry Cahill - Title: Sex Influences on Brain and Memory: The Burden of Proof has Shifted
DESCRIPTION:Larry Cahill: UC IrvineAbstract: Historically\, neuroscience paid little if any attention to sex\ninfluences outside a limited area of reproductive functions. But all that\nis changing\, and ever rapidly\, with a flurry of discoveries the past 10\nyears in particular about sex influences on brain function down to the\nmolecular level.  My area of emotional memory is no exception.  This talk\nwill examine these developments\, and detail how they are apparently\nirreversibly\, and fundamentally\, altering how the NIH funds not just\nneuroscience\, but all of biological science.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/larry-cahill-title-sex-influences-on-brain-and-memory-the-burden-of-proof-has-shifted/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141124T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141124T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4291-1416787200-1416787200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Nancy Dess - A Pan-Mammalian Tongue-Microbiome-Gut-Brain Axis? Implications for Health and Culture
DESCRIPTION:Nancy Dess: Occidental CollegeIn a 2002 BEC talk\, I described the working hypothesis that bittersweet taste is a marker for sensitivity to metabolic equanimity\, manifested in ways ranging from responsiveness to energy balance to emotional reactivity and stress vulnerability; data from rats selectively bred on a saccharin phenotype and\, to a lesser extent\, humans\, were presented in support of the hypothesis.  This talk provides an update on our research program\, including social behavior and evidence of an association between the taste phenotype and the gut microbiome.  I will draw on others’ recent research with nonhuman primates (taste polymorphisms and behavioral ecology) and humans (embodied cognition) to advocate for refinement and testing of multilevel integrative models that link individual-level taste to processes at lower (gut-brain axis) and higher (sociality\, culture) levels of organization.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/nancy-dess-a-pan-mammalian-tongue-microbiome-gut-brain-axis-implications-for-health-and-culture/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141117T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141117T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4290-1416182400-1416182400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Hanna Kokko - Males exist. Does it matter? -- Special Time -- 9:00am
DESCRIPTION:Hanna Kokko: Australian National UniversityA lot of evolutionary theory involves the concept of populations climbing towards peaks of higher fitness. Such theory has been written without taking into account that in most species there are two distinct classes of individuals — males and females — that influence the evolutionary process in a distinctly different way. I will talk about this\, and try to shed some light on two quite broad questions: why do males exist\, and what determines how they behave?
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/hanna-kokko-males-exist-does-it-matter-special-time-900am/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141110T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141110T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T220030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4289-1415577600-1415577600@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Kiley Hamlin - Moral Babies: Preverbal Infants Know Who and What are Good and Bad
DESCRIPTION:Kiley Hamlin: University of British ColumbiaHow do humans come to have a “moral sense”? Are adults’ conceptions of which actions are right and which are wrong\, of who is good and who is bad\, who deserves praise and who deserves blame wholly the result of experiences like observing and interacting with others in one’s cultural environment and explicit teaching from parents\, teachers\, and religious leaders? Do all of the complexities in adult’s moral judgments reflect hard-won developmental change coupled with the emergence of advanced reasoning skills? This talk will explore evidence that\, on the contrary\, preverbal infants’ social preferences map surprisingly well onto adult moral intuitions. Within the first year of life\, infants prefer those who help versus harm third parties\, those who reward prosocial individuals and punish wrongdoers\, and even privilege the intentions that drive actions over the outcomes they lead to. the second year of life\, toddlers direct their own helpful actions toward helpful individuals\, and harmful actions toward harmful individuals. These results suggest that our adult moral sense is supported\, at least in part\, by innate mechanisms for social evaluation.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/kiley-hamlin-moral-babies-preverbal-infants-know-who-and-what-are-good-and-bad/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141103T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141103T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005131Z
UID:4288-1414972800-1414972800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Katarzyna (Kasia) Pisanski - The Sound of Size: Human Vocal Communication of Body Size
DESCRIPTION:Katarzyna (Kasia) Pisanski: UCLABody size can have an immense impact on the biology\, ecology\, and social status of an animal\, but so too can ones ability to advertise or assess body size. Many species communicate their size vocally. Research investigating vocal communication of physical size in mammals\, including humans\, has focused on two salient and largely independent features of the voice: fundamental frequency and/or corresponding harmonics (perceived as voice pitch) and formant frequencies (resonance frequencies of the supralaryngeal vocal tract). In this talk\, I will discuss the degree to which fundamental and formant frequencies reliably predict variation in body size controlling for sex and age\, and their relative role in the perception or accurate estimation of body size in humans. The findings that I will present corroborate work on many other mammals whose mechanisms of vocal production\, including anatomical constraints on size exaggeration\, parallel those of humans. However\, my findings also highlight the impact of psychoacoustic\, sociocultural and perceptual biases on size communication in humans.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/katarzyna-kasia-pisanski-the-sound-of-size-human-vocal-communication-of-body-size/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141027T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141027T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4287-1414368000-1414368000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Leda Cosmides - Erasing Race in California and Brazil: Racial Categorization Varies Systematically with Patterns of Alliance Across Seven Brazilian States
DESCRIPTION:Leda Cosmides: UC Santa BarbaraAccording to the alliance detection hypothesis\, racial categorization is a (reversible) byproduct of cognitive mechanisms that evolved for detecting social alliances (Kurzban\, Tooby & Cosmides\, 2001; Pietraszewski\, Cosmides & Tooby\, 2014). In southern California\, showing subjects a single social interaction in which race is uncorrelated with alliance patterns produces a sharp decrease in racial categorization. But what happens in Brazil\, where the social history linking race with alliance patterns is different? We conducted tests in seven Brazilian states that differ radically in their racial composition. Social class is a major dimension along which alliances are formed\, and these states differ in the extent to which race predicts social class. Across states\, the extent to which categorization by race decreased in response to alliance cues was highly correlated (r = .97) with the cue validity of race for predicting that targets were of the same social class as the subjects.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/leda-cosmides-erasing-race-in-california-and-brazil-racial-categorization-varies-systematically-with-patterns-of-alliance-across-seven-brazilian-states/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141020T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141020T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215932Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4286-1413763200-1413763200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Scott Wiltermuth - I’d Only Let You Down: Guilt Proneness and the Avoidance of Harmful Interdependence
DESCRIPTION:Scott Wiltermuth: USCFive studies demonstrated that highly guilt-prone people may avoid forming interdependent partnerships with others whom they perceive to be more competent than themselves\, as benefitting a partner less than the partner benefits one’s self could trigger feelings of guilt.  Highly guilt-prone people who lacked expertise in a domain were less willing than were those low in guilt proneness who lacked expertise in that domain to create outcome-interdependent relationships with people who possessed domain-specific expertise.  Guilt proneness therefore predicts whether\, and with whom\, people develop interdependent relationships. The findings also demonstrate that highly-guilt prone people sacrifice financial gain out of concern about how their actions would influence others’ welfare.  As such\, the findings demonstrate a novel way in which guilt proneness limits free-riding and therefore reduces the incidence of potentially unethical behavior. Lastly\, the findings demonstrate that people who lack competence may not always seek out competence in others when choosing partners. 
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/scott-wiltermuth-id-only-let-you-down-guilt-proneness-and-the-avoidance-of-harmful-interdependence/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141013T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141013T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215932Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4285-1413158400-1413158400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Carl T. Bergstrom - Dealing With Deception in Biology
DESCRIPTION:Carl T. Bergstrom: Washington UniversityOver the past 3.5 billion years\, living organisms have evolved to acquire\, store\, analyze\, and transmit information. This information processing capacity has allowed organisms to build up increasingly complex social organizations predicated on the effective coordination and cooperation. Coordination and cooperation in turn require honest communication among the participants in a social group. To function effectively\, however\, social systems need to overcome various strategic issues surrounding the threat of deception: Why do agents share information even when their interests conflict? Why don’t cheaters exploit and undermine communication by sending deceptive signals?  How do communicating parties avoid eavesdropping and signal tampering? Such problems arise among the individuals within complex animal societies such as baboon troops\, cooperatively nesting birds\, and social insects\, and also among the cells within any single multicellular organism. I argue that the threat of deception can be broken down into at least two categories: 1) cases in which the legitimate members of the social institution have some overlap in interests\, but they also have individual incentives for deception\, and 2) cases in which non-members of the social organization attempt to parasitize and exploit the system by subversion and other forms of trickery.  We see the former category in the evolution of mate-choice signals; we see the latter in the evolution of immune strategies to deal with pathogens.  I will discuss the problem of deception in biological systems\, describe how these problems can be formalized using mathematical game theory\, and outline some of the strategies that organisms use to overcome these problems.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/carl-t-bergstrom-dealing-with-deception-in-biology/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141008T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141008T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4284-1412726400-1412726400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Joshua Greene - Moral Tribes: Emotion\, Reason & the Gap Between Us and Them
DESCRIPTION:Joshua Greene: Harvard UniversityIn this talk I’ll present some of the main themes in my book of the same title. First\, there are two general kinds of moral problems: The original moral problem is the problem of cooperation\, the “Tragedy of the Commons”—Me vs. Us. Distinctively modern moral problems are different. They involve what I call the “Tragedy of Commonsense Morality\,” which is about conflicting values and interests across social groups—Us vs. Them.  Second\, there two general kinds of moral thinking: “fast” intuitive thinking that is efficient but inflexible\, and “slow” moral reasoning that is flexible but inefficient. I’ll present evidence that “fast” thinking is good for solving more basic moral problems (Me vs. Us)\, but that we need “slow” moral thinking to handle modern moral problems (Us vs. Them).
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/joshua-greene-moral-tribes-emotion-reason-the-gap-between-us-and-them/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141006T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141006T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215918Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4283-1412553600-1412553600@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Trent Smith - Evolution\, Economic Insecurity\, and the Modern Obesity Epidemic
DESCRIPTION:Trent Smith: University of OtagoWhy have obesity rates risen sharply around the world since 1980? In biological perspective\, humans and other animals are thought to have evolved the ability—and the propensity—to store energy as body fat in order to survive periods of starvation. While food may be more abundant than ever today\, it is becoming increasingly clear that neoliberal economic policies have been progressively shifting more and more risk onto households over the period in which body weights have risen most dramatically\, and that obesity rates have risen most in countries that have pursued such policies most aggressively. A growing body of research now supports the “economic insecurity hypothesis\,” which posits that uncertainty with respect to one’s material well-being may be an important root cause of the modern obesity epidemic. This lecture will review evidence supporting this hypothesis\, from both the natural sciences and from econometric studies performed at the level of individuals\, of demographic groups\, and of countries. Implications for public policy will be discussed.http://www.business.otago.ac.nz/econ/Personal/ts_files/thumbprint.pdfhttp://www.business.otago.ac.nz/econ/Personal/ts_files/insecurity.pdfhttp://www.business.otago.ac.nz/econ/Personal/ts_files/stressdiet.pdfhttp://econpapers.repec.org/paper/agsaaea13/151419.htm
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/trent-smith-evolution-economic-insecurity-and-the-modern-obesity-epidemic/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140602T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140602T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005132Z
UID:4277-1401667200-1401667200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Greg Bryant - The structure and functions of human laughter
DESCRIPTION:Greg Bryant: UCLA Department of Communication Studies\, Center for Behavior\, Evolution and Culture Laughter is a universal vocal signal ubiquitous in human social interaction and homologous to play vocalizations across several primate species. In this talk I will describe two different lines of research on the production and perception of laughter. One series of experiments examined the perception of spontaneous versus volitional laughter. Specifically\, we explored relationships between particular acoustic features of laughs and judgments of how “real” they sounded\, as well as a study examining the connection between spontaneous human laughter and nonhuman animal vocalizations. In another series of studies\, participants across 24 societies reliably identified affiliative partners from extremely brief\, decontextualized clips of recorded conversational co-laughter. Several acoustic dimensions contributed to people’s judgments of affiliation\, and these results did not vary substantially across population samples. Overall\, laughter is an important social vocalization with deep evolutionary roots\, unique acoustic features\, and a variety of possible communicative functions\, both within and between groups.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/greg-bryant-the-structure-and-functions-of-human-laughter/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140519T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140519T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4276-1400457600-1400457600@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Stacy Rosenbaum - The development of male social partner preference in maturing mountain gorillas
DESCRIPTION:Stacy Rosenbaum: UCLA Department of Anthropology\, Center for Behavior\, Evolution and Culture Social relationships between adult male mountain gorillas and the infants in their groups are quite remarkable\, characterized by extreme tolerance\, grooming\, playing\, and many hours of male “babysitting.” This is true even in the 40% of groups that contain multiple adult males\, where paternity certainty is low. My previous work demonstrated that 1) low-cost parenting is the most likely function of these relationships\, and 2) preferences for individual male social partners persist across considerable time spans\, even after social upheaval. This talk will examine the beginnings of such relationships\, specifically the role maternal facilitation plays. Mothers increase their time near adult males in the first year after infants are born\, and there is some evidence that they narrow their male social circle\, spending more time near one preferred male than they do when infants get older. For a subsample of the population\, male rank is a much better predictor of females’ choice of male social partner than either paternity or mating history. I will discuss the implications these findings have for understanding paternal kin discrimination and the evolution of intra-species variability in social structure.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/stacy-rosenbaum-the-development-of-male-social-partner-preference-in-maturing-mountain-gorillas/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140512T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140512T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4275-1399852800-1399852800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Kelly Gildersleeve - Meta-analytic and Experimental Investigations of Shifts in Women's Mate Preferences and Attractiveness across the Ovulatory Cycle
DESCRIPTION:Kelly Gildersleeve: UCLA Department of Psychology\, Center for Behavior\, Evolution and Culture For nearly all mammals\, the high-fertility period of the ovulatory cycle is the only time when sex can lead to conception. In nonhuman species\, this period is often marked by dramatic changes in females’ social interactions. I’ll present two meta-analyses and several lab experiments examining similar effects in humans. Results revealed robust support for differences between high and low fertility in women’s sexual attraction to certain characteristics in men\, in some aspects of women’s social behavior (e.g.\, their flirtatiousness)\, and in their attractiveness. These findings suggest that women’s mating motivations and the responses they elicit from others are sensitive to their current fertility within the cycle\, with potentially important implications for their romantic relationships and social behavior more broadly.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/kelly-gildersleeve-meta-analytic-and-experimental-investigations-of-shifts-in-womens-mate-preferences-and-attractiveness-across-the-ovulatory-cycle/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140505T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140505T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215901Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4274-1399248000-1399248000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Sam Diaz-Munoz - Tiny tamarins challenge traditional perspectives on sex roles\, mating systems\, and the evolution of cooperation
DESCRIPTION:Sam Diaz-Munoz: UC Berkeley Department of Plant and Microbial Biology and Integrative Biology Tamarins (Saguinus sp) are small Neotropical monkeys that\, with other callitrichines\, exhibit the most extensive cooperative breeding system of any non-human primate. In this presentation\, I will draw on recent studies of tamarins and other callitrichines to underscore the importance of cooperative infant care to their complex social system. I review how callitrichines were originally classified as monogamous\, but instead have one of the most flexible social organizations among mammals and birds. I highlight how social organization responds to different ecological conditions and how this flexibility represents a challenge to the concept of the mating system. I suggest that the cost of infant care is a main driver of atypical sexual roles\, with intense female reproductive competition and extensive cooperation among males in reproductive contexts. I discuss other species that share elements of social organization with Saguinus tamarins\, including humans. Given that increasing evidence points to a cooperatively breeding past for early humans\, I advocate for an increasing focus on callitrichines as study systems for understanding the evolution of cooperative behavior in humans and all animal societies.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/sam-diaz-munoz-tiny-tamarins-challenge-traditional-perspectives-on-sex-roles-mating-systems-and-the-evolution-of-cooperation/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140428T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140428T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4273-1398643200-1398643200@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Jeffrey Schloss - Ecstatic Religious Rituals as Oxytocin-mediated\, Hard-to-fake Signals of Cooperative Commitment?
DESCRIPTION:Jeffrey Schloss: Westmont College Department of Biology A prominent evolutionary account of “religious cognition” is that it emerged as a byproduct of agency detection mechanisms biased toward false positives\, which were exapted as cultural innovations of moralizing gods helped stabilize cooperation by controlling defection in large-scale interactions.  Although there is some empirical evidence for this account\, along with the concomitant claim that religious rituals function as costly signals of commitment\, if the cost of such rituals is less than their benefit\, they need not function as honest signals of ascent.  This talk will examine the proposal that some kinds of religious rituals associated with autonomically mediated behaviors such as blushing\, shivering\, fainting\, and ecstatic speech\, may function as hard-to-fake\, though not costly\, signals that both convey and promote cooperative intent.  I will describe results from experiments in which human subjects engaged in a variety of religious and non-religious group activities – including Pentecostal worship – followed by participation in a series of decision tasks in standard economic games.  Indices of trust\, trustworthiness\, generosity\, and conditional responsiveness varied significantly between treatments. Measures of prosociality were correlated with the effect of group activity on plasma oxytocin.  I will discuss the implications and limitations of these findings for evolutionary accounts of religion and for our understanding of ritualized group behaviors as facilitators of cooperation.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/jeffrey-schloss-ecstatic-religious-rituals-as-oxytocin-mediated-hard-to-fake-signals-of-cooperative-commitment/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140421T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140421T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4272-1398038400-1398038400@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Josh Tasoff - A Biotic Economics Framework for Microbial Trade
DESCRIPTION:Josh Tasoff: Claremont Graduate University School of Politics and EconomicsA significant fraction of all life in the biosphere exists in complex communities in which crossfeeding is essential. In the same way that firms and consumers exchange a vast array of goods in modern markets\, organisms exchange essential resources to promote their growth. Here\, we present a framework based on general equilibrium theory from economics to predict the population dynamics of crossfeeding microbial communities. Analysis of a special case of the model involving two crossfeeding microbes yields several novel insights: (1) the economic concept of comparative advantage is a crucial condition for trade-based mutualism between species\, (2) species that contribute more resources increase their growth rate but at the expense of a lower share of the total population\, and (3) the inability to produce essential metabolites (i.e. auxotrophy) can be a selective advantage that explains its prevalence in microbial ecosystems. To test our model experimentally\, we construct a synthetic syntrophic consortia of Escherichia coli and manipulate the cells’ ability to exchange essential amino acids. Experimental data are consistent with those generated by our model. This biotic economics framework provides a foundation to tackle key questions in microbial ecology and evolution and has useful applications to engineering synthetic ecosystems.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/josh-tasoff-a-biotic-economics-framework-for-microbial-trade/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140407T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140407T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215854Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4271-1396828800-1396828800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Christopher Schmitt - The genomics of obesogenic growth during development and adult-onset obesity in captive vervet monkeys: Preliminary results and potential for studies in the wild
DESCRIPTION:Christopher Schmitt: UCLA Center for Nuerobehavioral Genetics Obesity is increasingly prevalent worldwide\, and has severe negative impacts on public health. Obesity arises from a complex interaction of genetic predisposition and environment that can accumulate throughout life. Although increasing evidence points to the importance of early development in the manifestations of adult disease\, few studies have been undertaken of developmental measures that might be associated with adult obesity risk. The search for obesogenic markers during development in humans is complicated by the ubiquity of diets high in fat and simple carbohydrates\, and the difficulty in assessing the actual diets of study subjects. This research investigates the genetic underpinnings of adult onset obesity and obesogenic growth trajectories from birth to adulthood in a genetically well-characterized model system under a controlled diet and environment: the African green monkey (Chlorocebus aethiops sabaeus) in the Vervet Research Colony at Wake Forest University. \nWe currently have some power to identify SNPs associated with these obesogenic traits\, but the sample size must be increased. With further sampling\, a more detailed examination of growth trajectories\, in combination with novel biomarkers such as the SNPs discovered in this study\, may be used to assess early obesity risks and promote the discovery of novel biomedical interventions. Perhaps of more interest to evolutionary anthropologists\, the results of this captive study could easily be extended to wild populations. Our research group has already sequenced the genomes of hundreds of vervet monkeys from across their ancestral ranges in Africa\, and in an isolated wild population on the islands of St. Kitts & Nevis in the Caribbean.  This research raises the exciting possibility of assessing phenotypic plasticity and environmental impacts on trait expression in the wild associated with SNPs that are obesogenic in captivity.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/christopher-schmitt-the-genomics-of-obesogenic-growth-during-development-and-adult-onset-obesity-in-captive-vervet-monkeys-preliminary-results-and-potential-for-studies-in-the-wild/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140331T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140331T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080334
CREATED:20200922T215854Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005133Z
UID:4270-1396224000-1396224000@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Fei Xu - Towards a rational constructivist approach to cognitive development
DESCRIPTION:Fei Xu: UC Berkeley Department of Psychology\, Infant Cognition and Language LabThe study of cognitive development has often been framed in terms of the nativist/empiricist debate.  Here I present a new approach to cognitive development: rational constructivism. I will argue that learners take into account both prior knowledge and biases (learned or unlearned) as well as statistical information in the input; prior knowledge and statistical information are combined in a rational manner (captured by Bayesian probabilistic models); and there exists a set of domain-general learning mechanisms that give rise to domain-specific knowledge. Furthermore\, learners actively engage in gathering data from their environment.  I will present evidence supporting the idea that early learning is rational\, statistical\, and inferential\, and infants and young children are rational\, constructivist learners.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/fei-xu-towards-a-rational-constructivist-approach-to-cognitive-development/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140310T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140310T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080335
CREATED:20200922T215853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005134Z
UID:4269-1394409600-1394409600@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Peter Todd - Domain-specific mechanisms for decisions about food
DESCRIPTION:Peter Todd: Indiana University Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences The need to find nourishing foods is a selective pressure that may have shaped many human cognitive processes\, from perception to memory.  In this talk\, I present some of our efforts to uncover such domain-specific influences.  Hurlbert and Ling (2007) suggested that an ancestral sexual division of labor\, with foraging females seeking out ripe fruits\, could have led to a cross-cultural female preference for red hues.  We have developed a novel approach to studies of sex differences and culture differences in color preference by analyzing the hue distributions of a large database of over 20 million color photographs on Flickr taken by men and women.  While we find a general red-hue preference among women across cultures\, we cannot attribute it to food-based images.  In another study\, we have found top-down influences of hunger on perceptual categorizations of edible versus non-edible items.  Finally\, we have been testing whether memory for recently eaten foods may be designed to let individuals track and respond to items that make them sick\, leading to a forgetting pattern different from the usual decelerating decay seen in other domains.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/peter-todd-domain-specific-mechanisms-for-decisions-about-food/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140303T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140303T000000
DTSTAMP:20260420T080335
CREATED:20200922T215849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201013T005134Z
UID:4268-1393804800-1393804800@bec.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Megan Robbins - The Little Things in Life: An Observational Perspective on Everyday Coping
DESCRIPTION:Megan Robbins: UC Riverside Department of Psychology This talk discusses the potential of a novel naturalistic observation method\, the Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR)\, for studying health-relevant social processes. The EAR is a portable audio recorder that periodically records snippets of ambient sounds from participants’ momentary environments. In tracking moment-to-moment ambient sounds\, it yields acoustic logs of people’s days as they naturally unfold. In sampling only a fraction of the time\, it protects participants’ privacy and makes large-scale observational studies feasible. As a naturalistic observation method\, the EAR provides an observer’s account of daily life\, which renders it optimal for studying the role of automatic expressive behaviors (e.g. sighing\, swearing\, laughing) and habitual communication processes (e.g. we-talk) in the coping context. I will first highlight findings regarding the role of sighing\, swearing\, and laughing in the coping process. Then\, I will present recent results from a study of the daily social interactions of couples coping with breast cancer.
URL:https://bec.ucla.edu/event/megan-robbins-the-little-things-in-life-an-observational-perspective-on-everyday-coping/
CATEGORIES:Past Presentation,Presentation
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR