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10 events found.

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  • December 2013

  • Mon 2
    December 2, 2013 @ 12:00 am

    Jay Belsky – Childhood Experience and the Development of Reproductive Strategies: An Evolutionary Theory of Socialization Revisited

    Jay Belsky: UC Davis Department of Human Ecology, Human Development and Family Studies Program An evolutionary biological perspective on the effects of the extra-familial and familial environment on multiple psychological, behavioral and even somatic features of children’s development challenges prevailing thinking about human development which regards some contextual conditions and their sequelae as “good” and […]

  • January 2014

  • Mon 6
    January 6, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Pamela Smith – The Social Distance Theory of Power

    Pamela Smith: UC San Diego Rady School of Management, Professor of Management and Strategy I propose that individuals with higher power should view the world in a more high-level, abstract fashion than individuals with lower power (Magee & Smith, 2013). As having power makes individuals less dependent on others (relative to lacking power), it increases […]

  • Thu 9
    January 9, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Paul Rozin – Reflections on Cultural and Evolutionary Psychology

    Paul Rozin: University of Pennsylvania, Department of Psychology None Available

  • Mon 13
    January 13, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Robert Watson – Conservatism and Creativity in Cultural Evolution: A View from the Arts and Humanities

    Robert Watson: UCLA Department of English Creative arts and humanistic learning allow us to vary, evaluate, and regulate the evolving cultural systems that we empower, at some cost and risk, to protect us from the unique openness of human consciousness. Culture takes over the conservative tasks (performed biochemically in most non-human creatures) of giving shape […]

  • Thu 23
    January 23, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Dario Maestripieri – Understanding human life history variation: sleep patterns, personality traits, relationship status, and hormones.

    Dario Maestripieri: University of Chicago, Department of Comparative Human Development; Institute for Mind and BiologySeveral lines of evidence suggest that eveningness is associated with traits that favor short-term mating such as higher extraversion, novelty-seeking, risk-taking, and short-term relationship orientation in both males and females. Night owl men also report a higher number of sexual partners […]

  • Mon 27
    January 27, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Thomas Plummer – Oldowan Archeology on the Homa Peninsula, Kenya, or what 2 million year old trash tells us about hominin behavior

    Thomas Plummer: Queens College Department of Anthropology, member of CUNY graduate faculty and New York Consortium in Evolutionary PrimatologyHumans are odd primates. We have unusually large brains, a diet rich in hard-to-acquire, nutrient dense foods, we practice extensive food sharing, and we can adapt to a broad panorama of environments through cultural practices and social […]

  • Fri 31
    January 31, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Jacinta Beehner – Changes in female reproductive condition following the arrival of new males in geladas: A physiological trifecta?

    Jacinta Beehner: University of Michigan Department of Anthropology The arrival of a new dominant male can be a tumultuous time for females in a primate social group – particularly when this male is likely to be infanticidal. Females of many taxa where infanticide occurs have developed counterstrategies to this threat. In sharp contrast with the […]

  • February 2014

  • Mon 10
    February 10, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Kirk Lohmueller – Discovering Recent Human History and Natural Selection from Genetic Variation Data

    Kirk Lohmueller: UCLA Department of Ecology and Evolutionary BiologyIt is commonly quoted that any two humans are identical at 99.9% of their three billion DNA letters. However, this statement also means that there are roughly three million positions where any two genomes are different. Many such variants have been accumulating throughout hundreds of thousands of […]

  • Mon 24
    February 24, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Morteza Dehghani – #morality in 140 Characters: Examining Moral Rhetoric in Text

    Morteza Dehghani: USC Brain and Creativity Institute, ARTIS Research FellowThe availability of vast and seemingly insurmountable volumes of human-related data has provided an unprecedented opportunity to study human cognition with range and detail previously not imaginable. An enormous amount of such data, however, is in the form of human generated text, and cannot be analyzed […]

  • March 2014

  • Mon 3
    March 3, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Megan Robbins – The Little Things in Life: An Observational Perspective on Everyday Coping

    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 […]

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