Dear all,
A reminder that this talk is happening tomorrow, at 4pm.
Best wishes,
Mariem
De : Talks <talks-bounces(a)cogsci.ceu.edu> de la part de Mariem Diane
<Diane_Mariem(a)phd.ceu.edu>
Date : mercredi, 27 août 2025 à 12:41
À : talks(a)cogsci.ceu.edu <talks(a)cogsci.ceu.edu>
Objet : [CEU Cogsci Talks] CDC Seminar: Nicolas Baumard (Institut Jean Nicod), Wednesday,
September 3, 4 pm
Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk.
Nicolas
Baumard<https://nicolasbaumards.org/> (Institut Jean Nicod)
Title: Revisiting Lorenz’s Kindchenschema: Cuteness as a System for Developmental
Engagement
Abstract: What is the evolutionary function of cuteness? The dominant view, inspired by
Lorenz’s Kindchenschema theory, holds that cuteness evolved to trigger caregiving
responses to vulnerable infants. While this care-based model is supported by robust
findings on facial features, neural activation, and hormonal responses, it fails to
explain a key pattern: we find children cutest not when they are helpless, but when they
are sociable, curious, and eager to interact. More surprisingly, we also perceive adults
as cute when they display not vulnerability, but naïveté, enthusiasm, and teachability. We
propose a developmental investment theory of cuteness, according to which cuteness is not
merely a care-eliciting mechanism, but a motivational system that evolved to support
various forms of prosocial investment in the development of inexperienced individuals.
Drawing on evolutionary anthropology, cognitive neuroscience, developmental psychology and
social sciences, we argue that cuteness identifies motivated but inexperienced
individuals, and elicits not rescue, but teaching, guidance, and social play. This theory
provides a better account of which traits elicit cuteness, what responses they provoke,
and how cuteness is strategically deployed. It explains why cuteness can be attractive in
romantic interactions, why modern, learning-rich environments foster an explosion of
cuteness in media, politics, and product design, and why women disproportionately perform
cuteness in patriarchal societies. Finally, we suggest that, over evolutionary time, this
system may have contributed to the domestication of other species — and to the
self-domestication of our own.
Date: Wednesday, September 3, 2025
Time: 4 pm (to 5:30 pm) CET
Venue: D-002 (QS Vienna) and Zoom (meeting ID: 969 2496
5784<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/96924965784?pwd=c2duZ0dDMFdEMUthK2Mwa2wzMllEUT09>,
passcode: 471712)
Chair: Gergely Csibra
Best,
Mariem
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP
here<https://forms.office.com/e/pAk6DcJwzF>
<https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=E1nE2VN24kuSC72wOGOBhAH3qG-CM_1AneZBqb5K0GdUMTNWU1gzUlU2S1lUU1pENDVCNDZYME1IVy4u>
to get access to the lecture hall.
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