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HEB 1312: Human Sexuality: Research and Presentation Seminar
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An examination of human sexuality from a scientific perspective. Students will read and present primary scientific literature that highlights current research on a variety of topics including: sexual development, gender identity, sexual orientation, cross cultural variations in mating systems, promiscuity, the evolution of monogamy, sexual attraction, sexual communication, including an exploration of the existence of human pheromones, libido and sexual dysfunction.
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HEB 1312 - Human Sexuality: Research and Presentation Seminar
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HEB 1318: BioDemography
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
How did there get to be so many of us? Population growth has profound effects on people's lives today. It also is one of the remarkable stories of our evolutionary history. This course explores how human patterns of reproduction, disease, death and migration have changed through time and vary around the world today.
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HEB 1318 - BioDemography
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HEB 1325: Evolution of Technology
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An important aspect of what makes us human is our unique reliance on diverse technologies. This class develops inferences about the evolution of technology from modern human traditional cultures, the archaeological record, hominin functional morphology, and comparisons with tool use in other primates. Readings, lectures, and discussions emphasize how technology is used for subsistence, shelter, physical protection, and other behaviors that helped ancestral hominins and contemporary humans occupy a range of variable environments.
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HEB 1325 - Evolution of Technology
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HEB 1330: Primate Social Behavior
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A review of the behavioral interactions in natural primate populations, drawing on experimental, observational, and theoretical studies. Discussion of ecological, physiological, and developmental bases of primate social behavior, with special attention to the evolution of patterns of behavioral interactions among individuals of different age, sex, relatedness, and status. Topics include sexual conflict, sexual selection, and mating systems; care of offspring and other aid-giving; manipulative and cooperative aspects of communication; competition, dominance, and territoriality; and the evolution of social relationships.
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HEB 1330 - Primate Social Behavior
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HEB 1331: Comparison and Adaptation in Primate Evolutionary Biology
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Understanding human evolution requires us to reconstruct the past and identify the adaptive basis of primate traits. How can this be achieved for behavior, language, culture and other traits that lack a clear fossil record? This course will take a hands-on approach to teach new methods for reconstructing evolutionary history. Through readings, computer labs and an independent project, students will investigate cognitive evolution in hominids, primate sociality, and ecological adaptations in humans and nonhuman primates.
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HEB 1331 - Comparison and Adaptation in Primate Evolutionary Biology
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HEB 1333: Primate Disease Ecology
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Infectious disease plays a major role in the lives of humans, and the same is true of nonhuman primates. This course will explore infectious diseases in humans and nonhuman primates. We will consider similarities and differences in disease ecology in humans and nonhuman primates, and we will investigate the role of infectious disease in primate - including human - evolution.
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HEB 1333 - Primate Disease Ecology
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HEB 1371: Paternity, Fidelity and Parenting
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Why do males and females have different sexual strategies? This course covers the remarkable diversity in human mating and family relationships. Key topics covered include the ecology of sex differences, male and female histories, mate choice, male coercion and female choice, reproductive strategies, the sexual division of labor and evolution of the human family. Emphasis is placed on behavioral aspects of male/female relationships across primates, and human societies.
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HEB 1371 - Paternity, Fidelity and Parenting
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HEB 1375: Testosterone and Human Behavior
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An exploration of current research in human behavior and testosterone, including the relationships between normal variation in testosterone and variation in traits such as cognition, aggression, personality traits, and sexual behavior within both males and females. Medical uses of testosterone, such as anabolic steroids, hormone replacement therapy, and reassignment, are explored.
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HEB 1383: The Evolution of Altruism, Selfishness and Spite
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
We expect evolutionary fitness to be maximized by selfishness. Why then do prokaryotes cooperate to make eukaryotes or individuals cooperate to make societies? We will examine the extent and degree of intra- and inter-specific cooperation from bacteria to humans. We will identify the diffferent reasons for cooperative, selfish and spiteful behavior in humans and then investigate the ecological and evolutionary causes and consequences of these in humans and other animals.
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HEB 1383 - The Evolution of Altruism, Selfishness and Spite
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HEB 1400: Nature vs. Nurture: What Makes You Who You Are?
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Evolution by natural selection should cause individuals to grow, reproduce and die in a manner that maximizes the number of surviving offspring they produce in their lifetimes. This lecture course will examine how fast and to what extent individuals should grow, when they mature, when they produce offspring and the number they produce, and finally when they senesce and die. The course will draw on examples from throughout the animal kingdom with particular emphasis on humans.
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HEB 1400 - Nature vs. Nurture: What Makes You Who You Are?
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