
CARTA: Birth to Grandmotherhood: Childrearing in Human Evolution – Birth and the Newborn Infant Infant State in Apes and Humans and Born Human: How the Utterly Dependent Survive
CARTA - Birth to Grandmotherhood: Childrearing in Human Evolution
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
April 14, 201457m 40s
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Show Notes
From the moment of birth, human infants require an inordinate amount of care and, unlike our nearest living relatives, remain dependent on a variety of caretakers during an unusually long maturation period followed by extraordinary adult longevity. How did such a distinctive pattern of development evolve and what other human features are linked to it? Wenda Trevathan (New Mexico State Univ) begins with a discussion about Birth and the Newborn Infant, followed by Kim Bard (Univ of Portsmouth) on the Infant State in Apes and Humans, and Sarah Blaffer Hrdy (UC Davis) on Born Human: How the Utterly Dependent Survive.
Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 28016]
Topics
Wenda TrevathanKim BardSarah Blaffer HrdyevolutionfamilychildrearingAnthropology and ArchaeologyHuman DevelopmentBehavioralHuman Developmentand Cognitive SciencesEvolutionSocial Science: Anthropology28016