It has been accepted for many years that all humans, regardless of culture, have the same facial expressions. A smile is a smile and means the same thing everywhere. However, a recent study of people's interpretations of facial expressions disagrees with this common wisdom.
Creating many computer generated facial expressions, the researchers asked recent immigrants to the U.S. and Westerns to interpret the faces. The subjects responded differently, which means that facial expressions may not have the biological basis that we have long assumed. This study needs more work (more participants) before this can truly change how we think about the emotions of humans, but it does hint to part of the problems we have when interacting with foreign cultures.
Read about it here
Friday, April 20, 2012
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
The Sun, and the Color of Our Skin
Of the many things we identify ourselves by, skin color
seems to be one that is both obvious and persistent throughout history (whether
for better or for worse). We attribute a
lot of things to the color of our skin.
We build communities, cultures and our identities around our skin
pigmentation, but we are often slow to attribute this “important” aspect of our
lives to the science and evolutionary principles that actually underlie
it.
While there have been many historical movements for and
against varying skin shades, there always is little thought paid to the fact
that skin color is very dependent on the ancient migration patterns of our
ancestors and the ability our extinct primate predecessors to adapt to heat and
sun exposure. Some scientists believe that
our very early ancestors had light skin, similar to that of chimpanzees. However, their skin began to experience various
pressures as they wandered out of the forest and began to populate the more
sun-exposed savannas and fields. In the
harsher environment offered by the savanna, our ancestors experienced selection
for more sweat glands and for the ability to spend more time foraging in the sun.
While most people recognize the existence of a skin color
gradient based on global latitude, it wasn’t until tests were conducted by NASA
in the 70s and 80s that we could for sure correlate the amounts of ultraviolet
light that reach the planet’s surface with skin color. These tests showed that areas closer to the
equator received more ultraviolet radiation and those further from it received
less, correlating with darker-colored skin near the equator and lighter skin
away from it. Furthermore it was found that
skin color actually has a lot to do with the vitamins that humans receive.
“Unfortunately” for
the supremacists (of any kind), skin pigmentation has more to do with regulating
ultraviolet penetration of the skin than it does with the capabilities and
rights of a human. Skin color
adaptations have been shown to oscillate and occur rather rapidly on an
evolutionary time scale. Given this
fact, it should be no surprise that they are currently changing and will
continue to change as human migration is further facilitated by improved means
of transportation. We should also expect to
see the effects of these adaptations on “displaced humans” who move to areas to
which their skin is ill-equipped to handle the levels of ultraviolet radiation. How do you guys think modern migration and
spread of technology will affect the color of our future?
Skin color of indigenous populations vary with the levels of ultraviolet radiation they receive. |
Jablonski, Nina, and George Chaplin. "The Evolution of Human Skin Coloration."Http://www.bgsu.edu. Bowling Green State University, 2000. Web. 15 Apr. 2012. <http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/chem/faculty/leontis/chem447/PDF_files/Jablonski_skin_color_2000.pdf>.
Kirchweger, Gina. "The Biology of Skin Color: Black and White." PBS. PBS, 2 Feb. 2001. Web. 16 Apr. 2012. <http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/07/3/text_pop/l_073_04.html>.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Antibacterial Hand Products. Potentially Dangerous, Decidedly Useless.
As the son of a bonafide germaphobe, I have become quite well acquainted with many of the different hand sanitizers currently out on the market. While I have certainly come to appreciate the smell of cucumber melon and isopropanol that follows my mother everywhere she goes, I certainly had to endure nearly the entire bouquet of scents that the different foam, gel, and liquid replacements to hand washing come in. One common factor present among all of these different products has really come to concern me, however, especially as I’ve learned more about evolution this semester. The worrisome component of these solutions of course, is the proudly advertised “antibacterial power” that my mother particularly seems to love. As we’ve learned in this and perhaps other courses, the elimination of sensitive bacteria by the careless use of antibiotics opens up a competition-free space for resistant bacteria to reproduce more successfully, evolve, and propagate their drug resistance. This of course can have tremendously negative public health outcomes if these bacteria end up being pathogenic for humans. Alarmed, I began to ask myself, can antibacterial gels and hand soaps lead to the spread of drug resistant bacteria in the same way that antibiotics do? Epidemiologists warn, they can.
Bird Song
I generally
appreciate birdsong as I walk around campus. However, I always find myself
grumpily thinking about strangling a bird and eating it for dinner when they
wake me up too early in the morning. But regardless of my annoyance, I usually
walk around Houston fairly amused by the chattering that goes above my head in
the form of song. But to my human ears, it all sounds like chirp chirp chirp,
if you know what I mean.
So it was to my
great surprise when I found out that birdsong has actually changed depending on
the environment. In fact, the sheer difference between the city and a forest
leads birds to have a change in bird song, and consequently in signaling. This
divergence was noted in an article that compared the songs of great tits within
the city and the forest where it found that songs changed both in duration and
also in frequencies. [1]. The great tits in noisy locations (city) sing at a
higher minimum frequency, most likely to be heard over the ever-present lower
frequency white noise of the city. Furthermore, these birds in the areas with
greater sound pollution had a restricted range in their repertoire of songs and
This study implies
that an environment changed by humans can potentially alter the communication
of a wild bird like the great tits. This amount of change in the communicative
aspect for wild birds domesticated within a city can affect breeding opportunities
and change a species' drastically. So while my own ears might be hearing chirp
chirp chirp, the population of birds in a city might actually slowly be
changing their own birdsong to something a little less diverse than expected in
the wild, which might even alter mating behaviors in the future.
[1] Slabbekoorn, H. & Peet, M. (2003). Birds Sing at a Higher Pitch in Urban Noise. Nature. 424, pg 267.
I am a Great Tit!
from http://robandmazza.blogspot.com/2011/05/chick- factor.html
See into these C-Sections
Recently I babysat
for a couple who wanted a night out. As they told me about their precious
little parasite, one thing that caught my ear was that she was a delivered
through a Caesarean Section rather than natural birth. Through some medically
related classes that I've taken at Rice University I've been hearing how there
has been an increase in the amount of C-sections done. Although many attribute
this phenomena to the availability and convenience of the procedure, I began
wondering if evolution could actually be a major factor in this increase of
C-sections.
Of course, research
needed to be done and I scoured through Google Scholar and the Fondren Library
for articles that could potentially let us see more clearly in this C-Section
phenomena. Many articles concur that there has been rising rates in caesarean
sections of approximately 10-15% in the World Health Organization [1].
However, delving specifically into the idea that evolution explaining an
increase of c-sections, apparently one reason linked to evolution is that the
human body is rather like a hunter-gather's body living in the 21st century.
While society has changed so that women have become fatter (sigh) and more
likely to give birth at an older age. However, evolution has not occurred
through natural selection on women's' bodies to adapt to those social
changes. So ultimately, the article
concluded, "cultural evolution has outstripped biological
evolution."
I quickly dove back
into the mess of articles to see if anything else corroborated these everyday
evolution events happening in our very midst (well, not mine or yours, but
"ours" as in humanity's). And I promptly stumbled upon another
article at that discussed the conflict between the maternal pelvis and fetal
head size in terms of selection pressure [2]. In this article, it was
concluded that human birth has always been constrained by the size of the
birth canal and pelvis (oh lovely
images), and that those babies with larger heads than normal before C-sections
would die from cephalopelvic disproportion. Thus, pelvis size has always been
a negative selection on the size of babies' heads.
The article goes on
to speculate about the increase of IQ that might be seen in the future due to
the introduction of C-section, and consequently the survival of big-headed
babies. However, I find myself a little
skeptical about that. But who knows, maybe the baby I watched over recently is
going to be a genius - after all, she did come from a C-section birth, the
newest removal of a negative selection force.
-Karen Lin
[1] Liston, W. A.
(2003). Rising caesarean section rates: Can evolution and ecology explain some
of the difficulties of modern childbirth? Royal Society of Medicine (Great
Britain).Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 96(11), 559-61. http://search.proquest.com/docview/235006270?accountid=7064
[2] Walsh, J. A.,
M.D. (2008). Evolution & the cesarean section rate. The American Biology
Teacher, 70(7), 401-404. http://search.proquest.com/docview/219029276?accountid=7064
Hominid Move from Trees to Ground
Our presence living on the ground (or at least not in trees) is seldom remarked upon in everyday life, but our ancestors spent their lives in the trees. How did our species make the move from the trees to the ground? Following loosely from my last post about learning more
about human bipedalism through the observations of a closely related species, a
new study into the ground nests of chimpanzees has revealed some interesting
possibilities about our ancestors’ move from the trees to the forest floor.
Bipedalism in Humans and Chimpanzees
One of the key identifying characteristics of humans is our
ability and preference for walking upright on two legs. We tend not to think
much of it in our day to day lives, but bipedalism is rare in the animal kingdom;
only primates are capable of it and among primates only humans are bipedal to
the exclusion of all else. But why did humans and other primates develop even
limited bipedalism? Other mammals exist without it fairly well. There have
doubtlessly been many theories about this trait, two are discussed below.
“Asian Flush,” a Gift or a Curse?
As anyone who has ever been to a Rice party can attest to, many of our friends from East Asian backgrounds tend to show a visible response to alcohol much more quickly than others might. While mostly thought of as nuisance, the pink facial tinting known as “Asian flush” or “Asian glow” is believed to have been evolutionarily selected as a favorable trait relatively recently in our biological history.
For those unfamiliar with “Asian flush,” the term is most commonly used to describe a wide range of symptoms that appear shortly after drinking alcohol. As the name implies, the most frequently experienced symptom of this is turning red in the face, though some report the occurrence of nausea, tachycardia, and facial swelling as well. These symptoms are produced as a direct result of an enzyme deficiency that leaves the body with an accumulation of one of alcohol metabolism’s first byproducts, acetaldehyde, which is the chemical culprit behind all of these unpleasant symptoms.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Evolution of human vocalization
Of the many things we take for granted on a daily basis, our ability to vocalize and speak, the mechanisms behind this and how this ability came to be is one of the most important.
Can you imagine how different our society would be, if it would even exist, without our ability to vocalize our ideas and emotions? Would we have developed advanced sign language or rely on some sort of chemical communication in order to elicit olfactory responses from our friends and family? The development of human vocalization is particularly amazing in that we are able to produce a seemingly endless array of sounds from percussive articulations to the more melodious sounds that our vibrating larynxes produce.
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Climate change and human evolution
The effect of climate change on various animal species has been studied, but scientists have never looked into the effect of climate change on the origin of humans, until now. Dr. John Stewart of Bournemouth University believes that climate change can explain why Homo sapiens survived while other species did not, why interbreeding occurred where and when it did, and other mysteries. You can read about preliminary findings here: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120315152514.htm
I can't wait to see what else results from this research!
- Samantha Masaki
I can't wait to see what else results from this research!
- Samantha Masaki
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