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Eric Michael Johnson received his masters degree in primate behavior and is now pursuing his PhD in the history of science.



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Journal of Human Evolution Sociality, ecology and relative brain size in lemurs.
JHE 2009 56(5):471-478.

American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Career or Family?: Maternal style and status-seeking behavior in captive bonobos (Pan paniscus).
AJPA 2008 135(S46):126

American Journal of Physical Anthropology
Lack of inbreeding avoidance and reduction of alliance formation in matrilineally- housed bonobos (Pan paniscus).
AJPA 2007 132(S44):137

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« The Politics of Human Nature | Main | On this Independence Day »

Friday Follow: Neurophilosophy

Category: Blogging
Posted on: July 3, 2009 9:03 PM, by EMJ

Or, Why I Love ScienceBlogs Reason #372:

Mo at Neurophilosophy has a fascinating article on the evolutionary origins of the nervous system:

THE HUMAN BRAIN is a true marvel of nature. This jelly-like 1.5kg mass inside our skulls, containing hundreds of billions of cells which between them form something like a quadrillion connections, is responsible for our every action, emotion and thought. How did this remarkable and extraordinarily complex structure evolve? This question poses a huge challenge to researchers; brain evolution surely involved thousands of discrete, incremental steps, which occurred in the mists of deep time across hundreds of millions of years, and which we are unlikely to ever fully understand.
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