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COURSE DETAIL

DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE ORIGINS OF HUMAN CULTURE
Country
Australia
Host Institution
University of Queensland
Program(s)
University of Queensland
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Psychology Anthropology
UCEAP Course Number
142
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE ORIGINS OF HUMAN CULTURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
ORIGINS: HMN CULTR
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description

We all prepare food, play cooperative games, romance each other etc. But how we do so depends on our cultural background–we are, by far, the world’s most ‘cultural animal’. So what was the “X-factor”, the magic ingredient of culture that took humans out of the general run of mammals and other highly social organisms? By emphasizing research in developmental psychology and integrating perspectives from comparative, social and evolutionary psychology this course explores contemporary answers to this question. We will be focusing on how an understanding of social and observational learning is critical to any answer, and to do so we will study the following populations: (a) typically developing infants and children; (b) children with autism; (c) adults; (d) non-human primates; and (e) other animals.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
PSYC3282
Host Institution Course Title
DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE ORIGINS OF HUMAN CULTURE
Host Institution Campus
St. Lucia
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department