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Brown Bag Lectures are informal, public talks that are followed by extensive dissussions. Speakers are KLI fellows or visiting researchers who are interested in presenting their work to an interdisciplinary audience and discussing it in a wider research context. The Brown Bag Lecture series was discontinued in 2014 with the KLI moving to its new premises in Klosterneuburg. In 2014 the KLI Colloquia were established as the new lecture series.

Entry 441 of 614

Event Details

Andreas Wilke
KLI Brown Bag
Past and Present Environments: The Evolution of Decision Making
Andreas WILKE (Clarkson University, Potsdam, NY, USA)
2010-07-13 13:15 - 2010-07-13 13:15
KLI for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg, Austria
Organized by KLI

Topic description:
The human mind is filled with evolved decision mechanisms designed to meet adaptively important goals. We outline a framework for studying those mechanisms from an evolutionary cognitive psychology perspective, which emphasizes the role of the environment in shaping organisms\' decision strategies. We hold that decision strategies often take the form of simple decision rules constructed from building blocks that draw on evolved capacities, all of which fit to particular information structures in the environment. We illustrate these ideas with research examples from our work on human foraging cognition: deciding when to leave a resource patch, searching for information in memory, predicting when a sequence of events will stop or continue, and detecting sequential dependencies when simultaneously foraging for multiple resources.

 

Biographical note:
Andreas Wilke is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology, Clarkson University, USA. He studied psychology at the Free University of Berlin (Diplom, 2002; Dr. phil., 2006) and was a postdoctoral researcher both at the Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition (ABC), Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin (2005-06 and 2008) and at the Center for Behavior, Evolution and Culture (BEC), Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles (2006-08). More recently, he was appointed as a research scientist in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington (2008-09) and as a postdoctoral fellow at the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg (2009). He has also been a visiting research scholar in the School of Natural Resources and Environment, the Institute for Social Research, and the School of Public Health, all at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research interests are in cognitive and evolutionary psychology, evolutionary and behavioral ecology, and biological anthropology.