Dear BERGers
Pawel will talk about a recent study on "Vocal greetings in four primate species".
The talk will be less than 30 minutes, leaving plenty time for discussion.
Hope to see you tomorrow, Hannah
From: BERG <berg-bounces(a)lists.stir.ac.uk> On Behalf Of Deborah Bruce
Sent: 26 February 2019 08:15
To: berg Mailing List <berg(a)lists.stir.ac.uk>
Subject: [BERG] BERG Meeting - Wednesday 27th February
Dear BERGers,
This week at BERG we have our own Pawel Fedurek speaking.
Our meeting is at the usual time and venue: 5.30 p.m. in the Common Room (3A94), with drinks and nibbles as always.
If you have students who might wish to be on the BERG mailing list, please send them this e-mail. To sign up to the BERG mailing list please use the following link: http://lists.stir.ac.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/berg
(You can also use this link to unsubscribe)
An up to date copy of our schedule can be found at: https://stir.app.box.com/file/379199974874
See you all on Wednesday.
Best Wishes,
Deborah
________________________________
The University achieved an overall 5 stars in the QS World University Rankings 2018
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159.
Dear BERGers,
This week at BERG we have our own Pawel Fedurek speaking.
Our meeting is at the usual time and venue: 5.30 p.m. in the Common Room (3A94), with drinks and nibbles as always.
If you have students who might wish to be on the BERG mailing list, please send them this e-mail. To sign up to the BERG mailing list please use the following link: http://lists.stir.ac.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/berg
(You can also use this link to unsubscribe)
An up to date copy of our schedule can be found at: https://stir.app.box.com/file/379199974874
See you all on Wednesday.
Best Wishes,
Deborah
________________________________
The University achieved an overall 5 stars in the QS World University Rankings 2018
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159.
Dear BERGers,
Just a wee reminder that there is no BERG meeting this week as it is Reading Week within the university.
I do however have another date for your diaries as we will be having an additional meeting this semester.
On Wednesday 24th April 2019, Hannah Buchanan-Smith will be hosting Sabrina Brando. Sabrina is Director of Animal Welfare with the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums and will be giving a presentation titled, " Global Collaboration for Animal Welfare".
Hannah will circulate further details closer to the event.
If you have students who might wish to be on the BERG mailing list, please send them this e-mail. To sign up to the BERG mailing list please use the following link: http://lists.stir.ac.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/berg
(You can also use this link to unsubscribe)
https://stir.box.com/s/rwzik2tsai3kausdtekqvgayv34otmgt
An up to date copy of our schedule can be found at: https://stir.app.box.com/file/379199974874
Our Spring Semester sessions will resume on Wednesday 27th February when our own Pawel Fedurek will be speaking.
Best Wishes,
Deborah
As UFAW kindly sponsor BERG, I offer to share details of their meetings. This one may be of interest to some.
Best, Hannah
From: Stephen Wickens <wickens(a)ufaw.org.uk>
Sent: 15 February 2019 10:29
To: Hannah Buchanan-Smith <h.m.buchanan-smith(a)stir.ac.uk>
Subject: UFAW Symposium Bruges 2019. Programme of talk and posters presentations announcement. Deadline for early registration ends 28th February.
Advancing animal welfare science: How do we get there? - Who is it good for?
UFAW International Symposium 2019
3rd-4th July 2019
Site Oud Sint-Jan, Bruges, Belgium
Dear Hannah,
The line up of speakers for the UFAW Symposium 2019 has now been announced and I'd be grateful if you could share this information with your colleagues, if you have not already done so.
The symposia will feature the following keynote talks:
* Professor Linda Keeling (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden) Advances in technology to monitor animal welfare on the farm
* Dr Joseph Garner (Stanford University, USA) Good science, good welfare. How understanding animals used in research helps us
* Dr Hans van de Vis (Wageningen Livestock Research, The Netherlands) Challenges associated with assessing and improving the welfare of farmed fish
In addition, the symposium will feature 29 talks from other speakers including (see attached .pdf for full list):
* Bennett RM (University of Reading, UK) The benefits of animal welfare science
* Rioja-Lang FC, H Bacon, M Connor, AB Lawrence and CM Dwyer (University of Edinburgh and Scotland's Rural College, UK) Prioritising animal welfare issues using expert consensus
* Jorquera MF, FR Dunshea, S Fuentes and EC Jongman (University of Melbourne, Australia) A pilot study of early detection of porcine pleuropneumonia using remote sensing and computer vision techniques over thermal infrared and RGB imagery
* Huertas SM, PE Bobadilla, M Prieto and JM Lestido (Universidad de la República and JM Lestido Project Management, Uruguay; OIE Collaboration Center on Animal Welfare and Livestock Production Systems (Chile-Uruguay-México)) A new methodology to improve animal welfare during transport: "PROGAT"
* Knock M and GA Carroll (Hartpury University Centre and Queens University Belfast, UK) The potential of post-mortem carcass assessments in reflecting the welfare of beef and dairy cattle
* Stracke J, D Klotz, P Wohlsein, N Kemper and B Spindler (University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Germany) Scratch the surface. Histopathology of foot pad dermatitis in turkeys
* Burn CC (The Royal Veterinary College, UK) Stopping senseless standardisation: How not to waste laboratory animal lives
The conference will start at 9.10 on the 3rd July, with registration from 8.00, and end at 17.10 on the 4th July. During the lunch break on both days there will be a poster sessions that will feature the posters on the attached .pdf. In due course abstracts for all the presentations will be made available on the conference webpage.
Registration and accommodation details:
The registration fee for the symposium is £325 (with a reduced rate of £255 available to delegates who register before 1st March). The registration fee includes attendance, lunch and refreshments over the two days and a drinks reception on the evening of 3rd July.
Further details on the symposium, including a registration form and booking accommodation in Bruges can be found on the UFAW website: www.ufaw.org.uk/ufawbruges2019<http://www.ufaw.org.uk/ufawbruges2019>.
Kindest regards,
Stephen Wickens, BSc PhD
UFAW Development Officer
Contact details:
Stephen Wickens, Bruges 2019, UFAW, The Old School, Brewhouse Hill, Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire, AL4 8AN, UK. Tel: +44 (0) 1582 831818; Fax: +44 (0) 1582 831414; Website: www.ufaw.org.uk<http://www.ufaw.org.uk/>; Email: wickens(a)ufaw.org.uk<mailto:wickens@ufaw.org.uk>
Follow us: [Facebook] <http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fufaw.…> ; [Twitter] <http://twitter.com/home?status=%40UFAW%5F1926-%20https%3A%2F%2Ftwitter.com%…>
About UFAW:
The Universities Federation for Animal Welfare (UFAW), the international animal welfare science society, is a UK registered scientific and educational charity that brings together the animal welfare science community, educators, veterinarians and all concerned about animal welfare worldwide in order to achieve advances in the well-being of farm, companion, laboratory and captive wild animals, and for those animals with which we interact in the wild.
Registered Charity No 207996 (Registered in England) and Company Limited by Guarantee No 579991
Hello all,
Please find an advert attached for a research assistant position working with capuchins based in Kyoto this summer.
Please feel free to forward to any non-BERGers who may be interested.
Deadline: 28th Feb
Best wishes,
Donna
Hi BERG people,
All you primate / evol psychology people might want to consider registering and submitting a paper or poster presentation for the upcoming PSGB meeting at the Powell-Cotton Museum.
The place alone is worth a visit as it contains a huge number of (dead) apes and endangered African primates (no, they are not endangered because they were shot in the 1900s but it didn’t help). Lots of type specimens too!
Best wishes
Phyllis
From: Ellie Donnelly <drelliedonnelly(a)gmail.com>
Sent: 07 February 2019 16:00
To: Phyllis Lee <phyllis.lee(a)stir.ac.uk>
Subject: Call for submissions: PSGB Spring Meeting April 2019
Hi Phyllis,
My name is Ellie Donnelly and I am the student representative for PSGB. I recognise your name from PSGB conferences hence why I've picked you to email. I realise it's a busy time of year, so apologies, but I am hoping you can help.
The student organising the Spring conference in April is really struggling with low submissions for poster and oral presentations and as the student representative I have volunteered to help actively encourage submissions from universities and other institutions by basically emailing someone in the relevant department at each University and asking them to distribute the below email to the relevant mailing lists at each one! I've noticed we don't have a student representative at Stirling, so no emails have probably been sent round the relevant mailing list/s there
I would be really grateful if you could send out this new one I've done to the relevant mailing lists at Stirling to encourage students to submit! As you know, It's a great opportunity for them to present. (Also I'm aware that Kent is literally the other end of the UK, but it's worth a shot, right?!)
Many thanks
Ellie
Dear students and staff,
My name is Ellie Donnelly and I am the student representative of the Primate Society of Great Britain. The society is dedicated to advancing the conservation of primates in the wild, ensuring the highest possible standards of care and welfare for captive primates and advancing research into all areas of primatology and related fields. Our members come from a wide variety of disciplines including conservation and captive care, comparative cognition and communication, osteology, veterinary medicine, genetics and ethno-primatology.
Following on from our extremely successful Winter Meeting at Bristol Zoo, our Spring Meeting is being held at the Powell-Cotton Museum on 8th and 9th April 2019. The theme for this conference is Primate Health, Captive Care and Conservation. All researchers regardless of career stage are encouraged to submit an abstract for a presentation at the meeting, but I am writing as we particularly wish to encourage students and those from allied professions involved in captive primate care to apply to present. The PSGB has a reputation of being a small, very friendly and inclusive society so please do not feel shy about presenting your work.
The Spring meeting has a very broad theme, which has been deliberately chosen to allow as many people from different disciplines as possible to present. Your research is more than likely to fit one of these categories.
Submissions are open for 15 minute oral presentations, 5 minute oral speed presentations and poster presentations, so you can present your research at a level and in a manner in which you are comfortable. The submission deadline of Friday 15th February is fast approaching but the full presentation does not have to be complete by then - just the outline in an abstract submission form on our website. You have plenty of time after that to perfect your talk or poster! In addition, the work you present does not have to refer to a completed project. We welcome the submission of preliminary findings, pilot studies or even proposed project plans. Alternatively, you may have presented your work elsewhere, but this meeting provides an opportunity to reach a different audience.
You have nothing to lose and only valuable experience to gain. We will also be giving out prizes for the best student/trainee poster and oral presentation. Presenting and/or winning prizes at a national conference, whether as a poster or orally, looks great on your CV or training record!
If you simply wish to attend the conference and support or watch others presenting, we welcome meeting registrations from members and non-members alike. Becoming a student/trainee member only costs £15 and is more than covered by the discount on ticket price it gives.
The deadline for ‘early bird’ discounted tickets for attendance is Friday 1st March. Our last meeting was sold out by the Early Bird deadline, so please don’t forget to book early to ensure a place!
Please find the links below for further information on the conference and to purchase tickets:
http://www.psgb.org/meeting_detail.php?ID=spring-meeting-2019-2019-04-08https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/psgb-spring-conference-2019-tickets-54651663…
You can follow PSGB student on twitter https://twitter.com/psgbstudent and facebook https://www.facebook.com/PSGBPhD/
Please do email any queries about presenting to the conference organiser Jaimie.morris(a)canterbury.ac.uk.or<mailto:Jaimie.morris@canterbury.ac.uk.or> any other queries to myself at student(a)psgb.org<mailto:student@psgb.org>
Many thanks and happy submitting!
Ellie Donnelly
PSGB Student representative
MAPhD student
Durham University
Dear BERGers,
This week at BERG our speaker is Anthony Lee who will be giving the following talk:
"A data-driven approach to human mate preferences".
Abstract: Previous research investigating human mate preferences has often used a theory-driven approach; however, this can be limiting as only traits predicted by existing theories can be investigated. I will present data from two papers where complementing traditional theory-driven research with data-driven techniques can help gain unique insight into human mate preference. The first analysis investigates women's facial attractiveness, while the second analysis focuses on written descriptions from online dating profiles.
Our meeting is at the usual time and venue: 5.30 p.m. in the Common Room (3A94), with drinks and nibbles as always.
If you have students who might wish to be on the BERG mailing list, please send them this e-mail. To sign up to the BERG mailing list please use the following link: http://lists.stir.ac.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/berg
(You can also use this link to unsubscribe)
https://stir.box.com/s/rwzik2tsai3kausdtekqvgayv34otmgt
An up to date copy of our schedule can be found at: https://stir.app.box.com/file/379199974874
See you all on Wednesday.
Best Wishes,
Deborah
Dear BERGers,
This week at BERG our speaker is David Pritchard who will be giving the following talk:
"Are hummingbirds "feathered bees"?: insect-inspired approaches to bird navigation"
Hi everyone, I have just moved here from Sue Healy's group in St Andrews to work with Mario Vallejo-Marin in Biology, and wanted to introduce myself, what research I have done, and tell you about what I am going to be doing in Stirling (spoilers: it involves bees). David Pritchard.
[cid:28182319-8982-451c-954c-b8899353fea8]
Our meeting is at the usual time and venue: 5.30 p.m. in the Common Room (3A94), with drinks and nibbles as always.
Although our schedule for this Spring Semester is almost complete but we still have one available date, Wednesday 27th March 2019. Would somebody like to sign up for this slot? Please do so using our Doodle Poll at: https://doodle.com/poll/shw5nppymad8e8b7
If you have students who might wish to be on the BERG mailing list, please send them this e-mail. To sign up to the BERG mailing list please use the following link: http://lists.stir.ac.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/berg
(You can also use this link to unsubscribe)
https://stir.box.com/s/rwzik2tsai3kausdtekqvgayv34otmgt
An up to date copy of our schedule can be found at: https://stir.app.box.com/file/379199974874
See you all on Wednesday.
Best Wishes,
Deborah