Behavioural biologist at McGill University. Interests in animal behaviour, cognition, and evolution; particularly innovation and social learning.
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http://biology.mcgill.ca/faculty/reader/ 30-11-2014 02:35:43
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‘Aging in a social world’: Lauren Brent (Exeter, UK; Lauren Brent) is giving the McGill Biology Organismal Seminar this Thursday, October 31, 15:30 in N7/1 Stewart. Warm up for her plenary at #SQEBC2019!
Julie Morand-Ferron (Julie Morand-Ferron) opens the #SQEBC2019 behavioural biology meeting with a free public talk (in French w/ English slides): “Différences individuelles et évolution de la cognition”. Fri. Nov. 1, 19:00 McGill Biology McGill University: McIntyre Room 522 ‘Palmer’. All welcome!
We still have power McGill Biology - #SQEBC2019 still going ahead!
If you are a scientist in any discipline and you want to volunteer in the fight against COVID-19, a new platform will help you do so: crowdfightcovid19.org And if you're already working on COVID-19, you can ask for tasks to be done for you for free. Crowdfight
Wyatt Toure Wyatt Toure is a master’s student at McGill University. He studies learning and developmental plasticity in guppies with Simon Reader (@[email protected]) and brain/behavioural evolution in butterflies with Stephen Montgomery. #BlackInAnimalBehavior
PhD (competition funded) in my lab with Peter Falkingham and Will Swaney looking at receiver responses to social signals using computer generated stimuli in a cooperatively breeding fish. findaphd.com/phds/faculty-o…
Glad to have finally joined Twitter! Encouraging enthusiastic individuals to join my lab McGill Biology McGill University in beautiful Montréal, Canada. Looking for a new PhD student that will examine neurogenesis in avian brood parasites. Visit guiguenolab.ca/opportunities.
Excited to attend my first American Fisheries Society meeting! Swing by next week to hear me talk about social learning, alarm cue and fish brains! Looking forward to some fishy discussions. #AFSvirtual2020
In their new study of #primate #taxonomy, Creighton et al. find no support for the hypothesis that taxonomic splitting causes lineages to be listed as more imperiled - read the paper for FREE via …lpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/share/YJP9XUWQ… Maria Creighton @WileyEcolEvol