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10 events found.

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  • January 2014

  • 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, […]

  • 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 […]

  • 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 […]

  • 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 […]

  • 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 […]

  • 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 […]

  • 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 […]

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

    Peter Todd – Domain-specific mechanisms for decisions about food

    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 […]

  • Mon 31
    March 31, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    Fei Xu – Towards a rational constructivist approach to cognitive development

    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 […]

  • April 2014

  • Mon 7
    April 7, 2014 @ 12:00 am

    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

    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 […]

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