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10 events found.

Events

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  • January 2022

  • Mon 10

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

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

    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

    Gerry Carter – Cooperative Relationships in Vampire Bats

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

    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

    Jenny Tung – The social genome and primate evolution

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

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

  • February 2022

  • Mon 7

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

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

    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

    Helen Davis – Culture, Cultural Change, and Cognitive Development

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

    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

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

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

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

  • March 2022

  • Mon 7

    Federico Rossano – Interacting like a human being: a developmental and comparative perspective on calibrating requests

    March 7, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    In his paper on the “human interaction engine”, Levinson famously asserted that, in social interaction, people’s responses “are to actions and intentions, not to behaviors” (2006: 45). Indeed human beings attribute intentions/goals to the production of signals and parsing other’s signals means simulating others’ mental worlds, at least to some degree.  But how do speakers calibrate their […]

  • Mon 28

    Lisa O’Bryan – Communication and the Coordination of Collective Behavior in Non-human and Human Social Groups

    March 28, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Lisa O'Bryan, Rice University In order to obtain social benefits, individuals must remain cohesive, coordinate their behavior, and collectively process information. The field of collective behavior focuses on understanding how group-wide properties such as these emerge from the interactions of many individuals. Most studies of collective behavior examine how coordination is achieved through visual cues […]

  • April 2022

  • Mon 4

    Kelsey McCune – Space Use, Exploratory Behavior and Rapid Range Expansion in Great-Tailed Grackles

    April 4, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    Humans are rapidly changing the natural world, leading to decreasing native fauna and increasing non-native fauna.  Problematic species range expansions are occurring across the globe, but not all species are able to become established outside of their original range.  It is still unclear which characteristics facilitate successful invasions or native species persistence in human-modified environments.  […]

  • Mon 11

    James Higham – Insights into Life-History from the Cayo Santiago Rhesus Macaques

    April 11, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

    We humans come from a diverse order, the primates, which make excellent model systems for studying the interface between the biological and the social. In this talk, I focus on our long-running field studies of the rhesus macaques of Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico. Decades of individual-based demographic data allow us to explore variation in life […]

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