- UD will close Wednesday, Feb. 10
- Latest weather cancellations
- UD to host men's Division 1 club hockey championships in 2011
- Delaware Quality Award presented to Bayhealth during event at UD
- PNC Bank to provide personal banking services to campus community
- Questions and answers concerning the UD-PNC contract
- Teens invited to participate in Get Up and Do Something video contest
- Library acquires papers of Thurman Adams, Jr.
- UD accepting applications for marine studies summer camp
- Vita Nova partners with Master Players Concert Series for special promotion
- Feb. 15 is deadline for Warner, Taylor, Draper award nominations
- New Student Orientation launches new Web site
- Harker tells state legislators UD is a sound investment
- Accelerated Nursing Program holds convocation
- Harker says UD initiatives will transform regional economy
- Educators: Take a free tour of UD's marine studies campus in Lewes
- History grad students revive Delmarva library collection
- 'Save the Connectors' receives support from Knights of Columbus
- UD in the News, Feb. 5, 2010
- Conference strives to mobilize offshore wind energy industry
- Report reveals gaps, progress in status of children in Wilmington
- Conservationists model smart shopping, save big
- Ludington steps down as ISSDC director to focus on coaching
- Feb. 24-May 12: Global Agenda series to focus on 'Understanding Political Islam'
- Dean Michael Chajes named Delaware Engineer of the Year
- UD, Harris Connect plan alumni print directory
- UD participating in RecycleMania 2010 competition
- UD alumni memorabilia sought
- UD, U.S. Army announce research and development agreement
- Resources for helping Haiti
- Feb. 25: Former assets of Newark Chrysler plant to be sold at auction
- More News >>
- Feb 19: Master Players Concert Series to present 'Molto Spiritual'
- Feb. 8-12: Student Centers host 'Spring Into Perkins' welcome week
- Feb. 9-Dec. 10: Abraham Lincoln in Harper's Weekly
- Feb. 10: Learn heart-healthy eating at UD Extension program
- Feb. 10-May 12: Women's Studies offers 'Research on Race, Ethnicity, and Culture'
- Feb. 11: History workshop to look at Haiti
- Feb. 12: Mathematical Sciences to host graduate research review
- Feb. 14: Alumni invited to UD women's basketball pregame brunch
- Feb. 15: Panel on free-speech rights of students set
- Feb. 15: Faculty, staff invited to forum on academic freedom
- Feb. 15: Black Student Union plans inventions exhibit at Trabant
- Feb. 15: Sen. Carper kicks off public administration seminar series
- Feb. 17: BAMS lecture to focus on street life, fatherhood
- Feb. 17-May 5: Jewish Studies Program offers spring lecture series
- Feb. 18: Spirit Ambassadors information session planned
- Feb. 20: Chinese New Year celebration planned
- Feb. 20-May 1: Seats still available for Metropolitan Opera bus trips
- Feb. 22: Furthur to perform at The Bob
- Feb. 23: West African songs, drumming, dance featured in workshop
- Feb. 23-March 23: Women's History Month film series planned
- March 2: 'Rev Run' to offer words of wisdom at Trabant
- March 4: Think Spring Fling to raise money for Food Bank of Delaware
- March 5: Longwood Graduate Program to host annual symposium
- March 9-23: Dining with Diabetes classes offered in Dover
- April 23-24: Witch hazels to be featured at UD Botanic Gardens plant sale
- May 7: Phi Kappa Phi plans ceremony
- Jan. 21-Feb. 20: Delaware's REP to stage 'She Stoops to Conquer'
- Jan. 26-June 25: 'Games People Play' library exhibition
- Jan. 26-June 29: Richard Hoffman Collection exhibition set
- More What's Happening >>
- UD calendar >>
- New tool to submit Business Expense Requests, allocate expenses now available
- UD enters Apple Education License Program
- UD offers graduate internships with arts, cultural organizations
- Keep software current: Latest vulnerability is Adobe Flash
- UD employees are losing to win
- Library offers iMovie '09 multimedia workshops
- Research Office announces new limited submission opportunities
- General Accounting announces new UDeposit financial tool
- Feb. 10: Library offers Mac workshop for instructors
- Changes to spring 2010 academic calendar noted
- Research Office announces NIH limited submission funding opportunity
- Vita Nova accepting reservations for spring semester
- Google Apps available for all students
- Office of Equity and Inclusion announces award deadlines
- More Campus FYI >>
2:50 p.m., April 27, 2009----UPDATE: The live Webcast and Second Life simulcast originally planned for the following presentation will not be available. A podcast will be available at a later date at the University of Delaware podcast site.
Robert Seyfarth, a noted expert on monkey communication, will present “Baboon Metaphysics: The Evolution of a Social Mind” from 5-6:30 p.m., Tuesday, May 5, in Room 130 Sharp Laboratory.
The lecture will kick off the University of Delaware's Year of Darwin Celebration, which is sponsored by the Center for International Studies and the Department of Anthropology, with support from colleges and departments across campus. The series, to continue through the fall, honors the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of his landmark work On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection.
Seyfarth is a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, where he has been on the faculty since 1985. He and Dorothy Cheney, his wife and collaborator, who is on Penn's biology faculty, studied communication, social behavior and cognition in chacma baboons in Botswana's Okavango Delta from 1992 to 2008. These baboons are among the largest of the world's five species and live in large groups of 100 where social rank is determined by a complex web of relationships.
Seyfarth and Cheney's work is described in Baboon Metaphysics, published in 2007 by the University of Chicago Press.
Publisher's Weekly said of the book: “Lovers' quarrels and murder, greed and social climbing: Baboon society has all the features that make a mainstream novel a page-turner. The question Cheney and Seyfarth ask, however, is more demanding: How much of baboon behavior is instinctive, and how much comes from actual thought? Are baboons self-aware? While describing important research about baboon cognition and social relations, this book charms as much as it informs.”
Seyfarth received his B.A. in biological anthropology from Harvard and his Ph.D. from Cambridge, where he was a student of Robert Hinde. He was a postdoctoral fellow at Rockefeller University, where he and Cheney worked with Peter Marler and began an 11-year study of vervet monkeys in Amboseli National Park, Kenya. That work is described in How Monkeys See the World, published in 1990 by the University of Chicago Press.
Other species and research sites that are currently the focus of Seyfarth's research group include rhesus monkeys on Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico; elephants in Sri Lanka; and geladas in Ethiopia.
No registration is required for the free event. A reception will follow in the lobby of Munroe Hall.
Additional support for UD's Year of Darwin Celebration has been provided by the Provost's Office, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Department of Biological Sciences, Department of English, Department of Geological Sciences, Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, Department of Philosophy, and the Science, Ethics and Public Policy Program.
Article by Tracey Bryant




