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10 events found.

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  • November 2021

  • Mon 15
    November 15, 2021 @ 12:00 pm

    Melissa Emery Thompson – The Gray Ape: What Can Chimpanzees Tell Us About Human Aging?

    Melissa Emery Thompson Evolutionary Anthropology, University of New Mexico Given their close evolutionary relationship to humans and lifespans that can extend into their 60s, chimpanzees are a uniquely informative comparative model for the evolution of human aging. Here, I will review early findings of the first focused study of aging in wild chimpanzees. Chimpanzees share […]

  • Mon 22
    November 22, 2021 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Bernard Koch – White Supremacist Trees in An Academic Forest: Does Anybody Hear Them?

    Bernard Koch, UCLA Sociology In this paper, we quantify the enduring legacy of scientific racism both within academia and online. Hereditarian arguments correlating race and IQ have been used to justify regressive social policies since the 1950s, and this literature remains active within academia today. We characterize a tight collaboration community of authors promoting these […]

  • Mon 29
    November 29, 2021 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Dominic Cram – Cooperation, health and ageing: lessons from weaver-birds, meerkats and honeyguides

    Cooperation in the natural world can, at first glance, appear puzzling: why should an animal cooperate when doing so is costly, and would benefit a competitor? In this talk, I will address this question by investigating links between cooperation and animal health using field studies of wild birds and mammals. I will first test whether […]

  • January 2022

  • Mon 3
    January 3, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Daniel Sznycer – Value Computation in Humans

    Valuing things comes naturally to us. But valuing things would be a forbidding task if we lacked the information-processing machinery that enables value computation and that needs to be understood. How does the human brain compute the value of things, events, and states of affairs? Things afford positive, neutral, or negative long-run effects on the […]

  • Mon 10
    January 10, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Ed Hagen – Homo medicus: The transition to meat eating, increased pathogen pressure, and the constitutive and inducible use of pharmacological plants in Homo

    Homo medicus: The transition to meat eating, increased pathogen pressure, and the constitutive and inducible use of pharmacological plants in Homo Edward H. Hagen, Aaron D. Blackwell, Aaron D. Lightner, Roger J. Sullivan Click here for link to manuscript pre-print   The human lineage entered a more carnivorous niche 2.6 mya. A range of evidence […]

  • Mon 24
    January 24, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Gerry Carter – Cooperative Relationships in Vampire Bats

    Several birds and mammals form affiliative relationships with both kin and nonkin that involve multiple forms of cooperation. When individuals form these long-term cooperative relationships, both the causes and consequences of each individual's cooperative investments are difficult to study. To understand how individuals form and maintain cooperative relationships, one must ultimately manipulate both associations and interactions […]

  • Mon 31
    January 31, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Jenny Tung – The social genome and primate evolution

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntV96u3Dr-M Jenny Tung Duke University http://www.tung-lab.org/

  • February 2022

  • Mon 7
    February 7, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Chris Kelty & Jessica Lynch – Pouncing on opportunities: domestic/feral cat biology and global human-mediated cat niche expansion

    Why are cats everywhere? Grounded on research into the controversy around feral or community cats and 'TNR' (Trap, Neuter, Return) in Los Angeles, we posit that the modern domestic/feral cat has demonstrated abilities toward multidimensional "niche expansion" and "niche space saturation" that allow it to succeed and increase in population density through behavioral diversification, where […]

  • Mon 14
    February 14, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Helen Davis – Culture, Cultural Change, and Cognitive Development

    What does cognitive development look like in a world without schools or formally educated parents or communities? What if our most fundamental measures of cognitive performance were influenced by small amounts of schooling or by having parents, siblings or others who attended schools in one’s household or community? Growing evidence suggests that the human mind […]

  • Mon 28
    February 28, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Elizabeth Hobson – Dominance hierarchies, fight decisions, and social support as windows into animal social cognition

    Elizabeth Hobson University of Cincinnati http://hobsonresearch.com/

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