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10 events found.

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  • March 2009

  • Mon 30
    March 30, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Roberto Delgado – Revisiting Island Differences in Orangutan Socioecology: Behavioral Flexibility and Geographic Variation

    Roberto Delgado: USC Department of AnthropologyInitial field observations and reports from a few short-term studies pointed to island differences between Bornean and Sumatran orangutans in their general appearance and behavioral ecology, implying meaningful taxonomic distinctions. However, upon further scrutiny at multiple sites and for longer periods of study, researchers have found population-specific differences across a […]

  • April 2009

  • Mon 6
    April 6, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Joseph Henrich – The Evolution of Cultural Adaptations: Fijian Food Taboos Protect Against Dangerous Marine Toxins

    Joseph Henrich: University of British Columbia Departments of Psychology and EconomicsThis talk will first develop an evolutionarily-informed, cognitively-grounded approach to culture, and then apply this approach to explain patterns of food taboos for pregnant and lactating women on Yasawa Island, Fiji. Within a broader cognitive framework, I focus on (1) understanding our capacities for cultural […]

  • Mon 13
    April 13, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Naomi Eisenberger – Why Rejection Hurts: Examining the Shared Mechanisms Underlying Physical and Social Pain

    Naomi Eisenberger: UCLA Department of PsychologyNumerous languages characterize ‘social pain,’ the feelings resulting from social rejection or loss, with words typically reserved for describing physical pain (“broken hearts,” “hurt feelings”) and perhaps for good reason. It has been suggested that, in mammalian species, the social attachment system borrowed the computations of the physical pain system […]

  • Wed 15
    April 15, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Barbara König – Cooperation and Social Selection – A Case Study of Communal Nursing in House Mice

    Barbara König: University of Zurich Institute of ZoologyIn addition to sexual selection, selection resulting from social interactions in contexts other than mating can be a potent evolutionary force. Such social selection processes are facilitated whenever individual fitness varies as a result of any form of social interactions. The choice of social partners for communal care […]

  • Mon 20
    April 20, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Edouard Machery – Did Morality Really Evolve?

    Edouard Machery: University of Pittsburgh Department of History and Philosophy of ScienceThat morality evolved is a commonplace among evolutionary biologists, psychologists, and anthropologists. In this talk, I will however argue that biologists, psychologists, and anthropologists have failed to pay enough attention to the differences between three distinct interpretations of the hypothesis that morality evolved: (1) […]

  • Mon 27
    April 27, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Jenessa Shapiro – Perceiving White Norms: Ironic Effects in Blacks’ versus Whites’ Judgments of Minority Targets

    Jenessa Shapiro: UCLA Department of PsychologyConformity to a perceived norm is a common strategy used to gain the approval of one's interaction partners. Identifying a group norm is ordinarily relatively simple. However, this task may be especially difficult when the norm is held by a group to which one does not belong, as is the […]

  • Wed 29
    April 29, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Paul Mellars – Rethinking Modern Human Behavioural Origins and Dispersal: Archaeological and Genetic Perspectives

    Paul Mellars: University of Cambridge Department of ArchaeologyResearch over the past ten years in both DNA studies and archaeology has provided some remarkable new insights into the origins of biologically and behaviourally modern human populations, and their widespread dispersal from Africa to the rest of the world around 60,000 years ago. The combination of DNA […]

  • May 2009

  • Mon 4
    May 4, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Scott Johnson – Mental Rotation in Adults and Infants: A Sex Difference

    Scott Johnson: UCLA Department of PsychologyMental rotation (MR) is the process by which people imagine how an object would look when rotated into a different orientation in space; it may be related to performance on tasks like perspective-taking and navigation. Men typically perform faster and more accurately than women on MR tasks. Known influences on […]

  • Mon 11
    May 11, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Joseph Manson – Adherence to Conversational Norms in Interactions Among Strangers: Effects on Cooperation and Expectations of Cooperation

    Joseph Manson: UCLA Department of AnthropologySeveral studies have shown that, following brief interactions among strangers, subjects perform better than chance at predicting whether their co-subjects will defect in a one-shot Prisoner’s Dilemma Game (PDG). However, previous work did not explore how such predictive accuracy was possible. Theoretical work suggests that adherence to “arbitrary” norms serves […]

  • Mon 18
    May 18, 2009 @ 12:00 am

    Daniel Geschwind – Transcriptome Organization in Human and Primate Brain: Connecting Genes to Brain to Cognition and Behavior

    Daniel Geschwind: UCLA Departments of Human Genetics, Neurology, and PsychiatryWe are interested in understanding how genes influence human cognition and behavior, leading to unique human cognitive specializations, such as language. Advances in molecular and statistical genetics now allow us to identify genes that may be responsible for the emergence of some of these human cognitive […]

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