6 EC
Semester 1, period 3
5102EVAN6Y
The question “what makes us human?” drives a wide variety of research projects in the field of Evolutionary Anthropology. To answer this question anthropologists make use of the phylogenetic comparative approach where they compare a variety of behaviours, ecology and physiological traits of humans with that of other closely related primate species. In addition, they compare the behavioural ecology of a variety of modern human societies that still exhibit similar hunting and gathering activities as those that lived before the Neolithic revolution to make an evolutionary reconstruction of human behaviour. Knowledge of the behaviour of humans in hunting and gathering societies is in addition used to better understand the extent of human cognition. The increasing number of studies that reveal that cognition and behaviour are influenced by experience during development, make us realize that studying the behaviours of WEIRD (Westernized Educated Industrialized Rich and Democratic) people only is insufficient to reveal the extent, variety and diversity of human cognitive abilities. In this course you will therefore learn what is currently known about the cognitive skills and behaviours of a large variety of human hunter-gatherer populations and their relation to social and ecological conditions.
In the course we will, in addition, read and discuss the book “The world until yesterday” from popular science writer Jared Diamond. Each chapter will be discussed together with the results of the latest publications about topics such as food acquisition, diet, division of labour, social system, dispersal and social networks, cooperation, war, child care and teaching, care for elderly people, dealing with danger, religion and language. I will introduce you to hunter-gatherer generalities, such as egalitarianism, demand sharing, autonomy, female cohesion, sexual equality, hunting and gathering activities by use of video material and stories from my own fieldwork with the Mbendjele Yaka pygmees and that of colleagues who worked with other foraging societies.
The course will end with one week of practical work. The practicum provides the option to test a diversity of hypotheses related to food finding strategies, such as the hunter-gatherer hypothesis on sex differences in spatial orientation abilities as well as hypotheses on the value of information sharing and the evolution of language. For this, you will use existing video and GPS data from a spatial food finding experiment that I conducted with the Mbendjele forager children in the rainforest in Congo. You will learn how to conduct an experiment with human participants, how to enter data efficiently in excel, how to make plots and do basic statistical analyses in R, how to draw inferences from the results and how to present these results to a scientific audience.
Teaching methods
Several formats will be used during this course:
Lectures
The lectures form the theoretical backbone of the course. Here I will discuss the value of comparative studies on human behaviour for gaining insight in the evolution of human behaviour and cognition. I will among other topics, explain the value of studies on hunting and gathering populations and explain hunter gatherer generalities. I will combine theory with examples (incl. videos) from my own research and that of colleagues. The lectures include two guest lecture of researchers currently studying cognitive skills in a variety of human populations.
Journal Clubs
To assess the cons and pros of popular science books we use the journal clubs to discuss claims made in the book “The world until yesterday” by reading and discussing scientific papers that address these claims. I will select three claims, for which I will provide papers. For each of these papers each one of you is required to make a short summary using powerpoint and to prepare to give this summary at the start of the meeting under my supervision.Two of these journal clubs will be joined by two guest researchers that may have written the paper. The last claim can be chosen by yourself. In the last journal club, students will present and discuss the papers they have found that support or discard a claim made by Jared Diamond. Students will present a summary for each scientific paper and lead the discussion.
Practicum
The practicum provides you with the option to test a diversity of hypotheses related to food finding strategies, such as the hunter-gatherer hypothesis on sex differences in spatial orientation abilities as well as hypotheses on the value of information sharing and the evolution of language. For this, you will use an existing dataset from a spatial food finding experiment that I conducted with the Yaka Mbendjele forager children in the rainforest in Congo. In this practicum you will choose and further develop a research question and develop ways to answer this question by use of a variety of data (video, sound recordings and GPS data) in Excel and R, in teams. The results of this work need to be presented at a conference-like poster session.
|
Activity |
Number of hours |
|
Computerpracticum |
5 |
|
Hoorcollege |
14 |
|
Practicum |
32 |
|
Presentatie |
2 |
|
Tentamen |
2 |
|
Werkcollege |
4 |
|
Zelfstudie |
88 |
|
|
|
Application:
The student can
Analysis:
The student can
Evaluation:
The student can
Programme's requirements concerning attendance (OER-B):
Additional requirements for this course:
Additional requirements for this course:
Attendance to all components of the course (apart from the lectures or when indicated as optional in datanose) are obligatory and absence will cause exclusion from the course. The lectures include information that cannot easily be acquired by reading literature. Hence, I recommend to attend all components of the course.
The above attendance requirement also applies to all online (computer) practicals and tutorials offered 'live'.
If you are unable to participate in a compulsory educational meeting due to personal circumstances (such as illness or special family circumstances), please contact the course coordinator or teacher directly by e-mail via the communicated e-mail addresses. It will then be discussed with you whether there are options for following the education in a different way, and if so, which ones.
If you are unable to attend education for a long time (longer than 1 week), please also contact the study advisor. NB Covid-19: Keep to the RIVM guidelines at all times, even if this means that you will have to miss one or more compulsory education meetings. Here too, please contact us immediately so that we can look together for a solution.
| Item and weight | Details |
|
Final grade | |
|
1 (100%) Tentamen |
The course is passed
- when is complied with the compulsory attendance in all parts of the
course (it’s a full time course that cannot easily be combined with a job or other courses)
- with active participation throughout the course.
The date, time and location of the inspection moment are in the DataNose timetable.
Het inzage moment zal plaatsvinden tijdens een van de practicum dagen
prepare a summary of each paper in powerpoint
The 'Regulations governing fraud and plagiarism for UvA students' applies to this course. This will be monitored carefully. Upon suspicion of fraud or plagiarism the Examinations Board of the programme will be informed. For the 'Regulations governing fraud and plagiarism for UvA students' see: www.student.uva.nl
| Week | Description | Preparation | |||
| 1 | Introduction Lecture | ||||
| Lecture 1 | Henrich et al 2010,Levinson-2012 | ||||
| Lecture 2 |
Kelly2013_chapters_3,4,6,Nunn_2011_comparativemethod, Nunn_2011_examples_comparativemethod,Marlowe_2010_chapter9, Laland_Brown2003 |
||||
| Journal Club 1 (only 1hour check schedule) | JC1_Kovács_Mehler_2009_Diamond_chapter10 | ||||
| 9:00 | club A | ||||
| 10:00 | club B | ||||
| 11:00 | club C | ||||
| 12:00 | club D | ||||
| Research Lecture (Lucas Molleman) | |||||
| 2 | Lecture 3 |
Kelly2013_chapters_1,6,8,9,10,Marlowe_2010_chapter_medianforager, Lewis2014_onlychapter8 |
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| Research lecture (Natalie Uomini) | |||||
| Lecture 4 |
Kelly2013_chapters_1,6,8,9,10,Marlowe_2010_chapter_medianforager, Lewis2014_onlychapter8 |
||||
| Journal club 2 (only 1 hour, check schedule) | |||||
| 9:00 | club D | ||||
| 10:00 | club C | ||||
| 11:00 | club B | ||||
| 12:00 | club A | ||||
| Lecture 5 | vanSchaik_Isler_2014, Kramer2005 | ||||
| Examined presentation Journal Club 3 (only 1hour, check schedule) | your own chosen article | ||||
| 9:00 | club B | ||||
| 10:00 | club D | ||||
| 11:00 | club A | ||||
| 12:00 | club C | ||||
| 3 | Exam |
Information provided in all lectures (including guestlectures), Kelly2013_chapters_1,3,4,6,8,9,10,Henrich et al 2010, Levinson-2012,Marlowe_2010_chapter_medianforagers, vanSchaik_Isler_2014, Kramer2005, Nunn_2011_comparativemethod,Nunn_2011_examples_comparativemethod, Marlowe_2010_chapter9,Laland_Brown2003 |
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| Introduction Practicum | |||||
| Practicum (datacollection/start analyses plan/collaborations) | |||||
| Statistics in R (GLMM) | |||||
| Practicum (help with data analyses) | |||||
| 4 | Computerpracticum (Data analyses Optional) | ||||
| Werkcollege_ poster presentation info | |||||
| Computerpracticum (Data analyses Optional) | |||||
| Computuer practicum (Statistical analyses Optional) | |||||
| Computerpracticum (Statistical analyses Optional) | |||||
| Poster presentation (exam) | |||||
| Re-exam |
The schedule for this course is published on DataNose.
Via de Zichtbare Leerlijnen Creator kun je zien aan welke eindtermen de leerdoelen van deze cursus bijdragen en hoe de vakleerdoelen, leerlijndoelen en eindtermen van de opleiding aan elkaar gekoppeld zijn:
https://datanose.nl/#program[BSc%20PB]/outcomes
https://datanose.nl/#program[BSc%20PB]/trajectories