The first talk in the 2011-2012 CDC seminar series will be given by:
Willem Frankenhuis, UCLA
Date: TUESDAY, August 23, 2011, 5 PM (Please note that this talk will be given on a different day than usual!)
Location: Cognitive Development Center, Hattyú u. 14, 3rd floor
An evolutionary approach to developmental change
Abstract: Although building blocks of cognition are commonly viewed in light of
evolution (e.g., core systems), processes of developmental change rarely
are. Developmental processes, however, can also be analyzed in light of
their evolved features, because natural selection shapes developmental
mechanisms that “construct” adaptive phenotypes—based on the physical
and social environment. In order to study how natural selection shapes
ontogenetic change, biologists have used a modeling approach called
dynamic optimization. In this talk, I will show how this approach can be
applied to the study of cognitive development. In doing so, I will
discuss several examples, including the study of developmental
plasticity, life history development, and learning and decision problems
involving continuous updating based on feedback—such as determining
whether another agent is responding contingently to one’s own actions.