ASAB WINTER MEETING 2019
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The social environment as a driver of behavioural plasticity within and between generations:
​From genes and physiology to behaviour

December 5-6, 2019 LONDON ZOO
For this year's ASAB Winter Meeting, organised by  Samantha Patrick, Niels Dingemanse and Julien Martin, we invite presentations on theoretical or empirical questions about behavioural plasticity and its links with the social environment. 
Registration for posters and talks is closed.
To attend the meeting, no need to register.

Conference outline

Social interactions, both within and between generations, characterize all major taxa, including animals, plants, and micro-organisms, and thus represent a major phenomenon. Many behavioural traits that animals express are modified as a function of phenotypes expressed by conspecifics around them. This form of plasticity, termed here social responsiveness, is very common in nature. In particular we know that within generation effects, such as sibling and conspecific competition, and among generations effects, such as parent-offspring conflict, shape an individual’s phenotype from the level of gene expression through to behavioural traits. However, the predicted crucial role that social interactions play in the shaping individual phenotype remains relatively underexplored in evolutionary behavioural ecology research.
Social responsiveness is relevant to a large number of research areas studied in behavioural ecology, but a heuristic integrative framework is currently missing. Recent calls for the incorporation of evolutionary theory (e.g. quantitative genetics paradigms) alongside physiological investigations (e.g. pace of life) in behavioural ecology studies of such social interactions highlight the importance of bringing together researchers across disparate fields. Speakers at the forefront of the field of behavioural plasticity will cover molecular, physiological and behavioural approaches and will provide a unique networking opportunity for behavioural scientist to engage with geneticists and physiologists to truly understand how mechanistic approaches underpin individual differences in behaviour.

Invited speakers

​Sinead English
​
University of Bristol
Alastair Wilson
​
University of Exeter
Julia Saltz 
​
Rice University

Tinbergen Lecturer

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Rebecca Kilner
University of Cambridge
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