
Have you ever wondered how elephants communicate with each other and what it means to other elephants?
How about the way in which dogs and humans interact when they play? Or perhaps you鈥檙e more interested in how other animals, like monkeys and birds, identify and locate their food?
These are important questions to Francine Dolins. She wants to share her interests, so the assistant professor of psychology helped organize an Animal Behavior Speaker Series at 每日大赛.
鈥淓ver since I鈥檝e arrived here, I wanted to do this because I thought it was sort of a natural connection on our campus with such strong psychology, biology and ecology programs,鈥 said Dolins, who studies spatial cognitive abilities of captive chimpanzees, as well as wild monkeys and lemurs.
The speaker series kicks off Friday, Feb. 8, with the first of seven distinguished scientists to visit campus. Peter Wrege, of Cornell University, will discuss 鈥淗idden Beasts 鈥 Listening to the voices of Africa鈥檚 forest elephants.鈥
鈥淗e鈥檚 a very distinguished scholar and behavioral ecologist who studied communication in birds and then shifted to studying acoustic communication in elephants,鈥 Dolins said. 鈥淚 tried to mix and match different species and different areas of research. I also tried to choose some people who have conservation interests, so they鈥檙e going be talking about basic science and how that relates to conservation issues.鈥
Dolins was especially pleased with the fact that all seven scientists she contacted about participating in the speaker series were quick to accept the invitation. The speaker series also is being offered to UM-Dearborn students as an independent study.
The intent is to help students interested in science-related careers network with some of the nation鈥檚 brightest scholars.
鈥淭hey can learn a lot from these distinguished scientists,鈥 Dolins said.
Dolins already has heard positive feedback from the campus community about the speaker series, and it has yet to kick off.
鈥淭he more that we learn about other creatures on Earth, the more we learn about ourselves, too,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 disconnect ourselves from the common ancestors we have with other species. We need to learn more about these species and hopefully, in the process, keep them from going extinct.鈥
Jerold Hale, dean of the College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters (CASL), plans to attend the speaker series events because of a personal curiosity with animal behaviors.
鈥淏ecause of my research on nonverbal behaviors and communication, I have a natural curiosity about the issues this series explores,鈥 Hale said. 鈥淭he series also represents the essence of interdisciplinary research and collaboration. Dr. Dolins has put together a fascinating speaker series that will explore the intersections of natural and behavioral sciences.鈥
CASL, the Behavioral Sciences and Natural Sciences departments, as well as the Integrated Learning Program will sponsor the speaker series. Dolins credits Hale, Marilee Benore, Nancy Wrobel, Don Bord and Tiffany Marra for their help in organizing the series.
Here鈥檚 a list of the Animal Behavior Speaker Series events:
- February 8: Peter Wrege, Cornell University 鈥 鈥淗idden Beasts 鈥 Listening to the voice of Africa鈥檚 forest elephants鈥
- February 15: Robert Mitchell, Eastern Kentucky University 鈥 鈥淎dventures with dog-human play behavior鈥
- February 22: Paul Garber, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 鈥 鈥淔oraging Strategies and Spatial Memory in New World Primates: Advantages of not always taking the path most traveled鈥
- March 8: Louis Lefebvre, McGill University 鈥 鈥淔eeding innovations in birds and their implications for ecology, evolution and neuroscience鈥
- March 22: Kay Holekamp, Michigan State University 鈥 Evolution & mediation of sex-role reversed traits in hyenas鈥
- March 27: Bill Hopkins, Georgia State University 鈥 Left, Right, Hand and Brain: Evolution of Hemispheric Specialization in Primates鈥
- April 3: Jacinta Beehner and Thore Bergman, UM-Ann Arbor 鈥 鈥淢inimizing reproductive loss: Female counterstrategies to infanticide in a wild primate鈥
* All events will be held from 3:30-5 p.m. in 1030 CASL, with a reception afterward on the fourth floor of the CASL Building.