january, 2019
Event Details
Humans have a variety of mating and marriage systems, and societies vary in the ways in which they classify
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Event Details
Humans have a variety of mating and marriage systems, and societies vary in the ways in which they classify family. This variation is not without limits, and explaining constraints and diversity invites a multi-level evolutionary perspective. In this talk I’ll describe the VariKin project, a multidisciplinary approach to understand the patterned variation in human kinship systems. The team brings together theory and method across anthropology, linguistics, evolutionary biology, cognitive science, and computational methods. We have results from large cross-cultural analyses using comparative phylogenetic methods, studies of the patterns of frequency of use in different language varieties, and insights into child acquisition and use from fieldwork in a Datooga community in Tanzania. Our framework takes inspiration from Tinbergen’s four questions towards illuminating a longstanding enquiry into human variability.
Link to Fiona Jordan’s webpage.
If you like to meet with Fiona please contact Catherine Sheard.
Time
(Tuesday) 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Location
Dyer's Brae Seminar Room
Dyers Brae, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Greenside Place, Fife, KY16 9TH, UK
Organizer
Maria Tello Ramos, Niki Khan, Nick Jones