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BIO A 499: Undergraduate Research
0.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
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BIO A 499 - Undergraduate Research
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BIO A 502: Preceptorial Reading
6.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
For beginning graduate students who have not had adequate training in the study of primate principles and methods involved in the study of evolution, human genetics, and the evolution of modern populations. Not open to graduate students in the biocultural anthropology program. Offered: AWS.
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BIO A 502 - Preceptorial Reading
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BIO A 520: Human Behavioral Ecology
3.00 - 5.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Principles and methods of evolutionary behavioral ecology, and critical examination of their application to human behavior in such areas as resource utilization, mating, parenting, life history, cooperation, and competition.
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BIO A 520 - Human Behavioral Ecology
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BIO A 525: Biocultural Research Methods and Study Design
5.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Shell-Duncan Survey of basic conceptual issues in the design of empirical research, with special attention to problems that arise during anthropological fieldwork. Topics include defining data needs, sampling strategies, problems with co-funding, proposal writing, human subjects approval, and basic ethical issues in human biocultural research.
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BIO A 525 - Biocultural Research Methods and Study Design
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BIO A 526: Quantitative Methods and Modeling for Biocultural Anthropology
5.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Surveys the concepts, tools, and methods for developing quantitative models based on underlying biocultural processes. Introduces methods of testing models from observations col ed in anthropological field studies. Oriented toward longitudinal research of fertility, mortality, disease dynamics, population genetics, and other biocultural processes.
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BIO A 526 - Quantitative Methods and Modeling for Biocultural Anthropology
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BIO A 550: Skeletal Biology and Prehistoric Demography
5.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
O’Connor Composition and structure of cakcified tissue. Analytical techniques and their contribution to interpretation of the archaeological record.
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BIO A 550 - Skeletal Biology and Prehistoric Demography
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BIO A 568: Human Reproductive Ecology
3.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
A consideration of the determinants of fertility variation within and among traditional human societies. Biocultural and ecological perspectives on pubertal timing, nuptiality, duration of birth intervals, and reproductive senescence.
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BIO A 568 - Human Reproductive Ecology
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BIO A 569: Demographic Analysis in Biological and Social Anthropology
5.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Leonetti Demographic analysis relevant to anthropological research on small populations. Use of data col ed through local surveys, genealogical methods, and from other sources. Focuses on use of demography to analyze social and biological processes with adaptive and/or cultural-historical significance. Theoretical approaches emphasized.
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BIO A 569 - Demographic Analysis in Biological and Social Anthropology
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BIO A 584: Topics in Ecology and Adaptation
3.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Seminar dealing with various aspects of ecology and adaptation. Topics vary each quarter.
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BIO A 584 - Topics in Ecology and Adaptation
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BIO A 588: Topics in Primate Evolution
3.00 Credits
University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Emphasis on fossil taxa and their importance in understanding the morphologies and distributions of members of modern taxa.
Prerequisite:
BIO A 488 and permission of instructor
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BIO A 588 - Topics in Primate Evolution
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