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Evolutionary Anthropology seminars

Autumn 2024

Tuesdays听3.30 -听5.00pm | Daryll Forde Seminar Room | Department of Anthropology

1 Oct 鈥 Anna Rotkirch,听Institute at Vaestolitta, Finland
鈥淭he partner privilege: Social networks and wellbeing in contemporary Europe鈥

8 Oct听鈥 Guy Jakobs, University of Cambridge
鈥淐hanging lifestyles and microbiomes in Indonesia鈥

15 Oct 鈥 Alex Mielke, Queen Mary University of London
鈥淩eimagining interactions as the basic unit of sociality鈥

22 Oct 鈥 Volker Sommer, 香港六合彩中特网
鈥淭he complete Chimpanzee: synthesizing field and lab research鈥

29 Oct 鈥 Emma Pomeroy, University of Cambridge
鈥淒eveloping understanding of Neanderthal mortuary behaviour from Shanidar Cave, Iraqi Kurdistan鈥

12 Nov 鈥 Elliot Howard-Spink, Max Planck Institute for Animal Behaviour
鈥淟andscapes of cultural accumulation in animals鈥

19 Nov 鈥 Jordan Moon, Brunel
鈥淪elf interest in cultural preferences鈥

26 Nov 鈥 Gill Thompson, University of Lancashire
鈥淗elping women recover from traumatic births鈥

3 Dec 鈥 Laura Buck, Liverpool John Moors University
鈥淣on-human primate models for exploring the effects of hybridisation in human evolution鈥

Spring 2024

Tuesdays听3.30 -听5.00pm | 14 Taviton Street |听Darryll Forde Seminar Room

9 January 鈥 Karen Swan (Natural History Museum)
鈥淕rowing up bipedal: skeletal adaptations to bipedalism and changes in cortical bone structure as children learn to walk鈥


16 January 鈥 Chris Dunmore (University of Kent)
鈥淕etting to grips with the internal morphology of hominin fossils鈥


23 January 鈥 Helen Fewlass (Francis Crick Institute)
New insights into the Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowician at Ilsenh枚hle Ranis, Germany


CANCELLED 鈥 30 January 鈥 Kim Bard (University of Portsmouth)
鈥淐himpanzee infancy in comparative perspective鈥


6 February

Nicole Torres-Tamayo (香港六合彩中特网)
鈥淓volution of human childbirth: what can we learn from other primates?鈥

Ursula Paredes-Esquivel (香港六合彩中特网)
鈥淢onkeys under stress: tales of transgenerational trauma, epigenetics, ageing and evolution鈥


20 February 鈥撎齂im Bard (University of Portsmouth)
鈥淐himpanzee infancy in comparative perspective鈥


27 February 鈥 Minhua Yan (IAST Toulouse)
鈥淗ow are norms maintained and how do they change? A theoretical model and a field study鈥


5 March 鈥 Emily Emmott (香港六合彩中特网)
鈥淚mproving breastfeeding rates in England: evolutionary听anthropological insights for public health鈥


12 March 鈥 Brenna Hassett (University of Central Lancashire)
鈥淕rowing Up Human: anthropological approaches to the long human childhood鈥

础耻迟耻尘苍听2023

Tuesdays听3.30 -听5.00pm | 14 Taviton Street |听Darryll Forde Seminar Room

3 October - Duncan Stibbard-Hawkes (University of Durham)
"Why hunt? Why gather? Why share?: Hadza self-assessments of foraging and food-sharing motive"

The adaptive motivations underlying hunter-gatherer food acquisition patterns and food-sharing have been extensively debated. Proposed motivations include self- and family-provisioning, reciprocity, 'tolerated theft' and skill-signaling. However, few studies have asked foragers themselves directly and systematically what motivates them. We recruited 110 Hadza participants and employed a combination of free-response, ranking and forced-choice questions to do just this. In free response tasks participants most often gave outcome-oriented foraging motives (e.g., 鈥榯o get food鈥) and moralistic sharing motives (e.g., 鈥業 have a good heart鈥), but several also mentioned theory-derived motives. In ranking tasks, participants gave precedence to reciprocity as a motive for sharing food beyond the household. There were small but real gender differences in foraging motive, in line with previous predictions: women were more likely than men to rank family-provisioning highly whereas men were more likely than women to rank skill-signaling highly. However, overall the relative importance of different motivations was similar for both men and women. Evolutionary researchers have often avoided self-assessments of motive. I reflect on this and ask whether researchers should give greater precedence to self-report data.

10 October - Michelle Kline (Brunel University)
"Finding a way: A roadmap for culturally grounded research in the human sciences"

17 October - Gilly Forrester (University of Sussex)
"Seeds of us: Evolutionary and developmental origins of cognition"

In the literal sense, ontogeny (the development of the individual) does not recapitulate phylogeny (the evolution of the species). However, during both human evolution and development, higher cognitive abilities build upon earlier acquired sensorimotor behaviours. Moreover, the integrity of the sensorimotor system has cascading consequences for the acquisition of the higher cognitive function. Evolutionary investigations report advantages of a 鈥榙ivided brain鈥 with respect to the fitness of the organism, however, it is not yet clear of the impact of functional brain biases on the development of modern cognition. My research focuses on the evolution and development of cognition, specifically targeting the relationships between cerebral lateralization, behavioural biases and cognitive abilities in human and non-human great apes. My experimental approaches treat sensorimotor and cognitive abilities as intrinsically linked components of a dynamic and unfolding system.

If you would like to meet with Gilly, please email Alecia Carter听辞谤听Simon Kenworthy.

[CANCELLED] 24 October - Simon Underdown (Oxford Brookes University) - please note this seminar has been cancelled due to sickness
"Infectious disease in the Pleistocene: Old friends or old foes?"

The impact of endemic and epidemic disease on humans has traditionally been seen as a comparatively recent historical phenomenon associated with the Neolithisation of human groups, an increase in population size led by sedentarism, and increasing contact with domesticated animals as well as species occupying opportunistic symbiotic and ectosymbiotic relationships with humans. The orthodox approach is that Neolithisation created the conditions for increasing population size able to support a reservoir of infectious disease sufficient to act as selective pressure. This orthodoxy is the result of an overly simplistic reliance on skeletal data assuming that no skeletal lesions equated to a healthy individual, underpinned by the assumption that hunter-gatherer groups were inherently healthy while agricultural groups acted as infectious disease reservoirs. The importance of DNA, from ancient and modern sources, to the study of the antiquity of infectious disease, and its role as a selective pressure cannot be overstated. I'll consider evidence of ancient epidemic and endemic infectious diseases with inferences from modern and ancient human and hominin DNA, and from circulating and extinct pathogen genomes.

31 October - Jeanne Bovet (Northumbria University)
"Unpacking the Beauty Premium: Using evolutionary human sciences to understand the effect of physical attractiveness on first impressions"

28 November - Gabriel Saffa (Max Planck Leipzig and University of South Bohemia)
"Evolution of rituals, sex and marriage: A phylogenetic cross-cultural perspective"

5 December - Andrew Gardner (University of St Andrews)
"The rarer-sex effect"

Spring 2023

Seminars marked "in person" are taking place in person in听IOE - Bedford Way (20) C3.11.

Seminars marked "online" are taking place online only on Zoom.

Contact: Alecia Carter

[CANCELLED] 10 January听Victoria Herridge (Natural History Museum)听-听in person
Title TBC

17听闯补苍耻补谤测听Andrea DiGiorgio (Princeton University)听-听in person
Bornean Orangutan Diet and Health - Novel Insights from Nutritional Geometry

24 January听Krishna Balasubramanian (Anglia Ruskin University)-听in person
Unravelling the links between animal socio-ecology, human-wildlife interactions, & infectious disease ecology: insights from nonhuman primates

31 January听Habiba Chirchir (Marshall University) -听in person
Title TBC

7 February Alecia Carter (香港六合彩中特网) -听in person
Primates' responses to death: insights into death awareness?

Reading Week 听**NO SEMINAR**

[CANCELLED] 21 February听Laura Lewis (UC Berkeley) - online
Title TBC

[CANCELLED] 28听February听TBC听- online
Title TBC

7 March听Laura Lewis (UC Berkeley) - online

14 March听Wenda Trevathan (New Mexico State University) - online
Are Humans 鈥淛ust Another Primate鈥 in the Way They Give Birth?