[BERG] BERG seminar today, 16:00

Pawel Fedurek pawel.fedurek at stir.ac.uk
Wed Mar 27 08:00:00 GMT 2024


Dear BERGers,

A quick reminder that Dr Sylvain Lemoine<https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/staff/dr-sylvain-lemoine> <https://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/staff/dr-sylvain-lemoine> (University of Cambridge) is giving a seminar for us (online) today entitled "Territorial landscapes: landscape of xeno-fear and tactical use of physical landscape in wild chimpanzees". Please find the abstract below.  I hope to see you virtually soon!

Abstract

Landscapes, whether physical or perceptive, such as landscapes of fear, play a major role in population dynamics and evolutionary processes. Drawing from empirical insights on the territorial behaviour of wild non-human primates, the landscape of xeno-fear proposes a conceptual framework in which the risk inherent from hostile rivals/neighbours builds a socio-ecological “Umwelt” for the individuals and the groups, influencing behavioural decisions, impacting in-group interactions and ultimately driving behavioural adaptations. This landscape of xeno-fear implies a conscious, recurrent and impactful perception of the risks imposed by strong and potentially lethal inter-group competition. The level of the perceived risk, traded off against other motives, drives behavioural decisions and changes aiming ultimately at minimizing risks. New insights on chimpanzee territorial behaviour demonstrate the materialisation of the landscape of xeno-fear through the use of physical landscape features, such as high ground, to pre-emptively detect hostile neighbours and act in a risk-minimising manner according to the information gathered. Other implications on potential behavioural variations and changes, including the effect of physical landscape heterogeneity on the intensity of inter-group competition can be drawn from this model. Given the selective potential of out-group conflicts on cooperation and cognitive skills in human evolution, the landscape of xeno-fear, cognitively and collectively perceived, could have had important implications in the evolution of hominin species in terms of movements, population dynamics, and ultimately cognitive and cooperative adaptations.


MSTeams link:


https://teams.microsoft.com/dl/launcher/launcher.html?url=%2F_%23%2Fl%2Fmeetup-join%2F19%3A9823d93069124396a7a40d99c8272bea%40thread.tacv2%2F1706004113357%3Fcontext%3D%257b%2522Tid%2522%253a%25224e8d09f7-cc79-4ccb-9149-a4238dd17422%2522%252c%2522Oid%2522%253a%25221a69c354-6581-4fd4-8530-c53f9ead0876%2522%257d%26anon%3Dtrue&type=meetup-join&deeplinkId=a1b73d26-7d67-4bcc-acbd-a387a288132b&directDl=true&msLaunch=true&enableMobilePage=true&suppressPrompt=true



Spring Semester speakers:



Date

Time

Speaker

Format



27/03/2024

16:00

Sylvain Lamoine (Cambridge)

Online

03/04/2024

16:00

Review of BERG research strategy (core BERG)

F2F

10/04/2024

16:00





17/04/2024

16:00

Victor Shirimizu (Strathclyde)

F2F (Room 4B96)

24/04/2024

16:00

Lifespan Equipment Demonstration



01/05/2024

16:00

Victoria Lee (SRUC)

F2F/hybrid

08/05/2024

10:00

James Brooks (Kyoto)

Online

15/05/2024







22/05/2024

16:00

Elodie Freymann

online



-------------------------------

Dr Pawel Fedurek (he/his)

Lecturer in Psychology

Behaviour and Evolution Research Group (BERG)



Division of Psychology, Faculty of Natural Sciences

University of Stirling

Stirling, FK9 4LA
Scotland, UK



Tel: +44 (0)1786 467844<tel:+441786467844>

Twitter: @fedurekp<https://twitter.com/fedurekp>  @BERG_Stirling​<https://twitter.com/BERG_Stirling>

Staff page<https://www.stir.ac.uk/people/1080868> | BERG page<https://www.stir.ac.uk/about/faculties/natural-sciences/our-research/research-groups/behaviour-and-evolution-research-group/>



I aim to reply within 3 working days (my working days are between Monday and Friday).

________________________________
Scotland’s University for Sporting Excellence
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159
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