• 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 2008

  • Mon 12
    May 12, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Peter Todd – Investigating mate search with simulation and speed-dating

    Peter Todd: U of Indiana Cognitive Science, Informatics, and Psychological and Brain SciencesThe choice of a mate is not only one of the most important decisions in our lives, but […]

  • Mon 19
    May 19, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Katie Hinde – Magnitude, Sources, and Consequences of Individual Variation in Milk Production in Rhesus Macaques

    Katie Hinde: UCLA AnthropologyLactation represents the greatest post-natal cost of mothering in primates and numerous studies have established that variation in maternal condition is associated with infant growth, development, health, […]

  • June 2008

  • Mon 2
    June 2, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Gyorgy Gergely – Beyond Imitative Learning: The case for Natural Pedagogy Evolutionary Mechanisms of Cultural Knowledge Transmission in Humans

    Gyorgy Gergely: Central European University, Budapest, Stanford Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral SciencesHuman minds construct cultural products that form part of the environmental niche to which new generations of […]

  • September 2008

  • Mon 29
    September 29, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Brian Skyrms – Evolution of Signaling Systems With Multiple Senders and Receivers

    Brian Skyrms: UC Irvine Department of Logic & Philosophy of ScienceSender-Receiver games are simple, tractable models of information transmission. They provide a basic setting for the study the evolution of […]

  • October 2008

  • Mon 6
    October 6, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Russell Jackson – What You See is not What You Get: Evolved Distance Perception Adaptations

    Russell Jackson: CSU San Marcos Department of PsychologyDistance perception is among the most ubiquitous psychological phenomena known. Humans utilize distance estimation during all waking hours and even when sleeping. Distance […]

  • Mon 13
    October 13, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Jessica Lynch Alfaro – Biological And Cultural Evolution In Capuchin Monkeys: Mapping Behavioral Traditions Onto A Cebus Molecular Phylogeny

    Jessica Lynch Alfaro: UCLA Center for Society and GeneticsDespite growing interest in capuchin monkeys as model organisms for social learning and cultural evolution, comparative evolutionary study of Cebus behavioral traits […]

  • Mon 20
    October 20, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Gary Charness – Three Field Experiments on Procrastination and Willpower / Territoriality and Gender in the Laboratory

    Gary Charness: UC Santa Barbara Department of EconomicsWe conducted three field experiments to investigate how people schedule and complete tasks, providing some of the first data concerning procrastination and willpower […]

  • Mon 27
    October 27, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Brooke Scelza – Bush Forager, Shop Forager: Production and Consumption Behavior in a Group of Western Desert Aborigines

    Brooke Scelza: UCLA Department of AnthropologyAustralian Aborigines in the Western Desert have gone through a nutritional transition in the last 50 years; moving from a diet of mainly indigenous “bush […]

  • November 2008

  • Mon 3
    November 3, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    John Alcock – Why I Am Still a Single-Minded Adaptationist

    John Alcock: Arizona State University Department of Life SciencesI will review why I became an adaptationist and continue to believe that the theory of natural selection as amended by W.D. […]

  • Mon 10
    November 10, 2008 @ 12:00 am

    Noah Goldstein – The Constructive, Destructive, and Reconstructive Power of Social Norms

    Noah Goldstein: UCLA Anderson School of ManagementSocial norms can be powerful drivers of human behavior, which means that communicators who can properly harness norms hold in their hands a powerful […]

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