The Grandmother Hypothesis: An Explanation for Human Development
As part of the Ernest Everett (E.E.) Just Symposium, University of Utah anthropology proessor Kristen Hawkes presented her research on the evolution of human behavior.
As part of the Ernest Everett (E.E.) Just Symposium, University of Utah anthropology proessor Kristen Hawkes presented her research on the evolution of human behavior.
This past Thursday marked the start of the three-day E.E. Just Symposium held here on campus. One presentation of interest, “Making Something out of nothing: The Journey in Establishing a New Operation for Children With a Rare Cancer”, was given by Dr. Andrea Hayes-Jordan ’87, DMS ’91.
For most medical conditions, financial concerns are shown to the biggest barrier in the effective delivery of treatment. However, for those with substance use disorders, therapy is barred by more complex, complicating factors. The patient must convince himself that his body needs the outside help.
In 1952, when Stanley Miller and Harold Urey recreated the primordial soup in their lab and zapped inorganic elements into amino acids, neither could have foreseen the next few decades’ progress towards determining life’s origins.
On Friday, Jenny Boughman, professor of zoology at Michigan State University and researcher […]