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    2011-06-24

    Explore "2011-06-24" with insightful episodes like "The Social Brain on the Internet", "Why the Hominin Cognitive Niche Was and Is a Crucially Socio-cognitive Niche", "Metacognition and the Social Mind: How Individuals Interact at the Neural Level", "Experiencing Language" and "Signals, Honesty and the Evolution of Language" from podcasts like ""New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution", "New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution", "New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution", "New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution" and "New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    The Social Brain on the Internet

    The Social Brain on the Internet
    In primates and humans alike, the number of social relationships an individual can have is constrained in part by its social cognitive competences and in part by the time available to invest in face-to-face interaction. I will show that time, in particular, has a significant effect on the quality and stability of social relationships. If the quality of a relationship is a function of the time invested in it, then we might expect a technology that allows an individual to cut through the time constraints inherent in face-to-face interaction will allow larger social networks to be maintained. Social networking media on the Internet provide one obvious possibility in this respect. I will review evidence suggesting that the Internet does not (and cannot) help us to widen our social horizons, and will show why. Presented by Robin Dunbar (Anthropology, University of Oxford, UK).

    Why the Hominin Cognitive Niche Was and Is a Crucially Socio-cognitive Niche

    Why the Hominin Cognitive Niche Was and Is a Crucially Socio-cognitive Niche
    Tooby and deVore argued that hominin evolution hinged on the exploitation of a unique 'cognitive niche'. We propose that a diversity of evidence indicates this was fundamentally a socio-cognitive niche. Analysis of hunter-gatherer ethnologies confirms unprecedented levels of egalitarian behaviour, cooperation and culture, in comparison to other primates and inferred ancestral stages. In conjunction with recent archaeological findings on the evolution of hunting, we use these data to reconstruct socio-cognitive changes in the course of hominin evolution, including joint planning and the impact of language. Precursors to these characteristics are inferred on the basis of recent observational and experimental studies of non-human primates' socio-cognitive abilities including cultural transmission, psychological attributions and understanding the requirements of cooperation. Presented by Andrew Whiten and David Erdal (Psychology, University of St. Andrews, UK).

    Metacognition and the Social Mind: How Individuals Interact at the Neural Level

    Metacognition and the Social Mind: How Individuals Interact at the Neural Level
    I will review recent research in neuroimaging and computation neuroscience, and present a new paradigm for studying decision making in pairs. Results from this paradigm demonstrate that discussion between the partners is necessary and sufficient for creating an advantage for the group decision and a more accurate picture of the world than can be achieved by either partner alone. I conclude that metacognition - the ability to introspect upon one's own experience and to communicate this to another - is the key to understanding the evolution of human cognition, including consciousness and group decision making. Presented by Chris Frith (Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at UCL, UK)

    Experiencing Language

    Experiencing Language
    The evolutionary relationship between human linguistic capacity and humans' emotional make-up has not, as yet, received focused attention. Was the evolution of language in our lineage possible because early hominines were emotionally different from their ancestors, and, if so, in what ways? Has language altered human emotions? We discuss and develop recent proposals that an important precondition for the evolution of human language was the evolution of social emotions in pre-linguistic humans. We suggest that as language evolved, it altered important aspects of human emotionality, leading to a co-evolutionary feedback between human linguistic ability and human emotions. Presented by Eva Jablonka, Daniel Dor, Simona Ginsburg (Cohn Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science, Tel Aviv University, Israel).

    Signals, Honesty and the Evolution of Language

    Signals, Honesty and the Evolution of Language
    The evolution of language is a long-standing puzzle for many reasons. One is that its very virtues as a system of communication seem to open the door to ruinous free-riding and deception. This paper will locate and partially solve that problem within a framework explaining the evolution of honest signals and informational co-operation in human evolution, and will use that framework to develop a partial picture of language evolution. Presented by Kim Sterenly (Philosophy, Australian National University).

    Creativity Lecture 4: Two Sides of the Creativity Coin - Innovation and Lock-in

    Creativity Lecture 4: Two Sides of the Creativity Coin - Innovation and Lock-in
    Professor Steve Rayner (University of Oxford) presents creative and innovative potential solutions to the energy crisis and problems caused by climate change. Steve Rayner is Director of the Insitute for Science, Innovation and Society (InSIS) at the Saïd Business School of the University of Oxford, from where he also directs the Oxford Programme on the Future of Cities. He is also a Professorial Fellow of Keble College, Oxford and Honorary Professor of Climate Change and Society at the University of Copenhagen. His most recent book is Unnatural Selection: The Challenges of Engineering Tomorrow's People (Earthscan, 2009).

    Creativity Lecture 4: Two Sides of the Creativity Coin - Innovation and Lock-in

    Creativity Lecture 4: Two Sides of the Creativity Coin - Innovation and Lock-in
    Professor Steve Rayner (University of Oxford) presents creative and innovative potential solutions to the energy crisis and problems caused by climate change. Steve Rayner is Director of the Insitute for Science, Innovation and Society (InSIS) at the Saïd Business School of the University of Oxford, from where he also directs the Oxford Programme on the Future of Cities. He is also a Professorial Fellow of Keble College, Oxford and Honorary Professor of Climate Change and Society at the University of Copenhagen. His most recent book is Unnatural Selection: The Challenges of Engineering Tomorrow's People (Earthscan, 2009).

    Kesäpuhuja Solja Krapu 2011-06-24 2011-06-24 kl. 18.00

    Kesäpuhuja  Solja Krapu 2011-06-24 2011-06-24 kl. 18.00

    Runoilija, kirjailija ja kertoja Solja Krapu on Sisuradion ensimmäinen kesäpuhuja kesällä 2011. Näin hän esittelee itse itsensä: Minun nimeni on Solja Krapu. Minä olen runoilija ja lavarunoilija, kirjailija ja kertoja. Tänään kerron kokemuksista elämäni varrelta, työstä ja arjesta, unelmista ja niiden toteuttamisesta.

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