Christopher X J. Jensen
Associate Professor, Pratt Institute

When any behavior can be modeled, real-world constraint is critical

Posted 17 Jul 2012 / 0

PLoS One “Modeling Collective Animal Behavior with a Cognitive Perspective: A Methodological Framework“

A Minor Post, Behavior, Behavioral Ecology, Cognitive Ability, Evolutionary Modeling, Intelligences, Modeling (General), Neuroscience

Identifying the genes that gave dolphins their big brains

Posted 27 Jun 2012 / 0

Science Now “Building a Bigger Dolphin Brain“

A Minor Post, Brain size, Cetaceans, Cognitive Ability, Genetics, Neuroscience

Daniel Dennett on Darwin and Turing’s “strange inversion of reasoning”

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

The Atlantic “‘A Perfect and Beautiful Machine’: What Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Reveals About Artificial Intelligence” I like this idea of “competence without comprehension”. I think that this could apply to a lot of our cultural practices as well as to the brilliance of evolved biological adaptations. I also appreciate the use of the “sorta” Read More

A Minor Post, Adaptation, Articles, Cognitive Ability, Evolution, Natural Selection

Our brains are too smart to be tricked: diet sodas just make your body crave more calories

Posted 19 Jun 2012 / 0

Science News “Diet Sodas May Confuse Brain’s ‘Calorie Counter’“

A Minor Post, Health & Medicine, Mismatch theory, Neuroscience, Web

Are dolphins on their way to domesticating humans?

Posted 07 May 2012 / 0

Global Animal  “Dolphins Team Up With Fisherman” Now if only the dolphins can somehow get over that little “needs to breathe air every two minutes” problem with humans through artificial breeding. Seriously, though, this is really interesting as an analog for the kind of coevolution that probably occurred between humans and wolves. Just as was Read More

A Minor Post, Cetaceans, Cooperation, Human Uniqueness, Intelligences

Scientific American “Controlling the Brain with Light”

Posted 09 Nov 2010 / 0

Neuroscience represents a sort of “last frontier” in biology: despite decades of research into the nervous systems of a diverse set of organisms, scientific understanding of how the web of neurons we call a brain creates complex emergent patterns of cognition and behavior remains limited. Part of the challenge faced by neuroscience has to do Read More

Adaptation, Ethics, Experiments (General), Genetic Engineering, Neuroscience

Consilience

Posted 03 Jun 2010 / 0

I just read E.O. Wilson’s Consilience for the first time. Published in 1998, Consilience represents Wilson’s attempt to bridge the gap between the natural and social sciences. Given my interests, it is pretty ridiculous that I had not read this book earlier. Although I do research that sits firmly within the realm of natural science, Read More

A Major Post, Books, Consciousness, Human Evolution, Human Nature, Interdisciplinarity, Reviews, Social Science

Patternicity and that jerk on the cell phone

Posted 22 May 2009 / 0

I was recently taking the Amtrak down from Vermont to New York City when I noticed an interesting contrast, pointed out to me by a chatty fellow passenger. I generally favor trains over planes when it comes to travel: trains have a drastically smaller carbon footprint, are more reliable, and allow more legroom. But one Read More

A Major Post, Consciousness, Evolution, Evolutionary Psychology, Human Evolution, Psychological Adaptation