Quentin Atkinson – The Cultural Evolution of Human Languages

Quentin Atkinson: University of Oxford Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary AnthropologyLanguages, like species, evolve. Words and phrases compete for our favour in a struggle for existence that is analogous to natural selection. Words that survive are passed on from generation to generation in a process of descent with modification. This process has generated the thousands […]

Aaron Blackwell – Life history, immune function, and helminths: The behavioral and immunological ecology of the Shuar of Ecuador

Aaron Blackwell: UCSB Department of AnthropologyThe Shuar are a large and semi-autonomous indigenous group from the Amazonas region of Ecuador. Most Shuar subsist on a mixture of foraging and horticulture, but increasingly Shuar in many areas are becoming integrated with market economies. This talk presents fieldwork conducted amongst the Shuar between 2005 and 2009, with […]

Uri Gneezy – Gender differences in preferences

Uri Gneezy: UCSD Rady School of Management Arthur Brody Endowed Chair in Management Leadership, Professor of Management and StrategyIn this talk I will discuss some recent findings regarding gender differences in economic experiments. The discussion will focus on gender differences in competitiveness, but will also touch on differences in risk preferences and social preferences. I […]

Erol Akcay – Evolution of motivations and behavioral responses: Integrating the proximate and ultimate causes of behavior

Erol Akcay: University of Tennessee National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS)There is extensive work on the evolutionary causes of social behaviors, but integration of this theory with the proximate mechanisms of behavior has lagged behind. Here, I will present a new modeling approach to achieve such integration. The model rests on goal-oriented motivations, […]

Thomas Flamson – Encryption Theory: The evolution of humor as an honest signal

Thomas Flamson: Santa Monica College Department of Earth Science / UCLA Department of AnthropologyThe Encryption Theory of Humor proposes that humor evolved as a means of signaling similarity in locally variable personal features in order to facilitate assortment with the most compatible peers within the local group. It claims that a necessary component of humorous […]

Robert Wayne – Evolution and diversification of the domestic dog

Robert Wayne: UCLA Department of Ecology and Evolutionary BiologyThe domestic dog is one of our most remarkable inventions. The behavioral and functional diversity of the dog far surpasses that of its wild progenitor, the gray wolf. Similarly, in size and proportion, dogs exceed the diversity of the entire carnivore order. The dog genome project and […]

James Holland Jones – Contact Networks, Models of Infectious Disease, and Epidemic Simulation

James Holland Jones: Stanford University Department of AnthropologyInteraction networks shaped by social processes constitute the substrate on which various phenomena of interest to evolutionary anthropologists and human biologists occur. Examples of such phenomena include epidemics, diffusion of ideas or information, and the exertion of social and political influence. Understanding the structure of network formation is […]

Michael Alvard – Social structure, cultural kinship, and cooperation among the Lamalera whale hunters of Indonesia

Michael Alvard: Texas A&M University Department of AnthropologyThe human ability to form large, coordinated groups is among our most impressive social adaptation. Larger groups facilitate synergistic economies of scale for cooperative breeding, economic tasks like group hunting, and success in conflict with other groups. In many organisms, genetic relationships provide the structure for sociality to […]

Dominic Johnson – Adaptive Politics: The Strategic Advantages of Psychological Biases

Dominic Johnson: University of Edinburgh Reader in Politics & International RelationsA recent explosion of work suggests a key role for human physiology and evolutionary psychology in understanding political behaviour, from genes to hormones to cognition. However, the entire notion of an evolutionary basis for human behavior meets a traditional skepticism in the social sciences, and […]