Penn State Penn State: College of the Liberal Arts

Center forHuman Evolution and Diversity

Search
Losin_096_OS_8497-med

Historically studies in neuroscience have presented their findings regarding how the brain works as universal to all humans, whereas studies in anthropology have focused on the great cross-cultural diversity in behavior and thought. Furthermore, studies of the human brain and mind are typically conducted with samples that are highly unrepresentative of the global population. Therefore, in order to truly understand the functions of the brain and mind across the spectrum of human diversity, it is necessary to integrate theory and methods from anthropology, psychology and neuroscience.

Elizabeth Losin, Associate Professor of Biobehavioral Health

2023 Darwin Day

2023 Darwin Day

Featuring Herman Pontzer, Ph.D., Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University and alumni of Penn State University Department of Anthropology

Herman Pontzer, Ph.D., Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology and Research Associate Professor of Global Health at Duke University, investigates how our deep, evolutionary past shapes our lives today. His team conducted the first measurements of daily energy expenditure in traditional hunter-gatherers and in non-human apes, with discoveries that have changed the way we think about diet, exercise, metabolism, and health. Dr. Pontzer’s book, Burn, was published in March 2021.