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Mike Ryan: "Crazy love" - nonlinearity and irrationality in mate choice

Theme:
frogs
What:
Talk
When:
11:00 AM, Friday 29 Jun 2018 (1 hour 30 minutes)

Louis Lefebvre (Moderator)
Professor McGill University


Michael Ryan (Speaker)
Professor University of Texas

Choosing a mate is one of the most important decisions an animal can make. The fitness costs and benefits have been analyzed extensively in the context of sexual selection. The neural and hormonal bases of mate choice have provided insights into how animals make such decisions. Less attention has been given to the higher-level cognitive processes involved. The assumption that animals choose mates predictably and rationally is often violated. I will review studies in which cognitive analyses suggest that mate choice decisions are more complex than they might seem.
Lea, A.L.; Ryan, M.J. 2015. Irrational mate choice revealed by túngara frogs.  Science 349:964-966. 
Ryan, M. J. 2018. Chapter 7, Fickle Preferences. from A Taste for the Beautiful: The Evolution of Attraction. Princeton University Press, Princeton. (link to come)
Participant
University of Texas
Professor
Moderator
McGill University
Professor
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