Dear BERGers,
Quick reminder that today, Dr Eva Reindl (Durham University ) is giving a seminar for us
about her research entitled "The structure of executive functions in preschool
children and chimpanzees". Please see the abstract, and the link to the meeting,
below.
Abstract
Humans are cognitively unique – but what are the abilities that underpin this uniqueness?
One prominent explanation focuses on socio-cognitive abilities such as imitation,
teaching, theory of mind, and prosociality. Another, complementary, suggestion is that
modern humans differ in more domain-general cognitive mechanisms, namely Executive
Functions. In this talk I will present a recent publication from our lab (Völter et al.,
2022<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fw…)
in which we studied and compared the structure of Executive Functions (specifically:
working memory, inhibitory control, attention shifting) in 55 chimpanzees and 185
preschool children using a test battery of nine non-verbal, novel tasks. Research on human
adults has demonstrated the elusive nature of executive functioning, with different labs
identifying a different number and structure of latent factors underlying performance.
Research on human children has tentatively pointed to a single common factor underlying
performance in executive functions tasks. Our work adds to this perspective, finding some
support for a 1-factor model explaining performance across tasks in both children and
chimpanzees. I will discuss potential explanations for these results and briefly point to
some ongoing further analyses of these data.
About Eva:
Eva is a postdoctoral research associate working with Prof Rachel Kendal, Prof Robert
Barton (Durham University) and Dr Amanda Seed (University of St Andrews) on a project
founded by the John Templeton Society investigating Sequence cognition in primates. She is
broadly interested in learning which cognitive and social factors differentiate humans
from other great apes. She is interested in sequence cognition, executive functions,
social learning, cumulative culture, and tool use, among other topics.
Eva completed her PhD in Psychology at the University of Birmingham in 2017, working with
Dr Claudio Tennie, Prof Sarah Beck, and Prof Ian Apperly on a project investigating the
developmental origins of cumulative culture. After that, she held a teaching position at
the School of Anthropology at the University of Oxford. In 2018, Eva moved to St Andrews
to work as a postdoctoral researcher with Dr Amanda Seed on a project investigating the
structure of executive functions in chimpanzees and human children. In 2021, Eva was a
lecturer at Birmingham City University, before starting her current job at Durham
University in 2022.
Link to the meeting:
https://teams.microsoft.com/dl/launcher/launcher.html?url=%2F_%23%2Fl%2Fmee…
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