Trent Smith – A Theory of Natural Addiction

Trent Smith: UCLA International InstituteThe economic theory of "rational addiction" posits that drug addiction can usefully be viewed as the outcome of an informed decision undertaken on the part of the consumer. I employ a complementary approach to developing a behavioral theory of addiction by identifying circumstances under which addiction-like behavior is the solution to […]

Michael Rose – The Evolution of Free Will

Michael Rose: UC Irvine Dept. of Ecology & Evolutionary BiologyHuman behavior is unlike that of all other known animal behavior in its high degree of flexibility and versatility. A problem that is given less attention than it deserves is that flexible behavior is difficult to explain in Darwinian terms. "Free will" poses a challenge to […]

Olav Sorenson – Social networks and exchange: Self-confirming dynamics in Hollywood

Olav Sorenson: UCLA Anderson School of ManagementStudies have consistently found that social structure influences who transacts with whom, and that actors appear to benefit when exchange occurs embedded within these relations rather than in an unstructured market. Explanations for these results frequently point to their effectiveness in solving problems inherent in the trade of certain […]

Patricia Churchland – What Happens to Free Will if the Brain is a Causal Machine?

Patricia Churchland: UCSD Dept. of PhilosophyAlthough questions concerning the nature of free choice have long been at the center of philosophical reflection, new discoveries, especially from neuropharmacology and neuropsychology, have lent them a special and very practical urgency. In the courts, in the education of children, and in general in daily life, we assume that […]

Gary Marcus – Language in the era of the Genome

Gary Marcus: NYU Dept. of PsychologyTwo of the most central questions in understanding the nature of the uniquely human talent for language are the extent to which the underlying neural machinery is "innate" (or "built-in"), and the extent to which that machinery is specialized for language as opposed to other cognitive functions. In this talk, […]

Jerome Siegel – The Phylogeny of Mammalian Sleep

Jerome Siegel: UCLA Dept. of PsychiatrySleep amounts vary by more than an order of magnitude across mammalian species. Either the amount of time spent sleeping has no relation to underlying function, which would distinguish sleep from many other homeostatically regulated processes, or sleep need varies considerably across species. Prior data and new data on primitive […]

Chris Boehm – Two Anthropological Models for Understanding Global Conflict Resolution

Chris Boehm: USC Dept. of AnthropologyChimpanzees and human hunter-gatherers are taken as models which help to explain our troubled world of nations, which in many ways is like a chimpanzee community with dominant alpha nations that throw their weight around---but in others is like a hunter-gatherer band, in which the group sees to it that […]

Aimee Plourde – The Evolution of Prestige Good Economies and the Origins of Sociopolitical Complexity

Aimee Plourde: UCLA Dept. of AnthropologyThe emergence of social ranking and political hierarchy in human society constituted a fundamental departure from the small, egalitarian group structure thought to characterize society for most of our species’ history. Explaining the origins of social ranking is thus key to understanding the underlying structures of modern human societies, and […]

Jim Sidanius – Individual and Institutional Congruence in the Reproduction of Group-based Social Hierarchy: A Social Dominance Perspective

Jim Sidanius: UCLA Dept. of PsychologyBased upon ideas borrowed from classical elitism theory, social identity theory and evolutionary psychology, social dominance theory basically assumes that human social systems are predisposed to organize themselves as group-based social hierarchies. Given this assumption, social dominance theory then attempts to identity the multi-leveled processes that are responsible for the […]