Jump directly to main navigation Jump directly to content Jump to sub navigation

Laurel Fogarty

Senior Scientist

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture
Deutscher Platz 6
04103 Leipzig  

Phone: +49 341 3550 319
E-mail: laurel_fogarty@[>>> Please remove the text! <<<]eva.mpg.de

Office: level 1, room u1.31

Research interests
Curriculum Vitae
Publications

Research interests

I use mathematical and computational models to understand the processes underlying cultural evolution. In particular, I focus on the effects of population structure and demography on the dynamics of cultural change. I use a variety of methods from analytical models to simulation frameworks to examine the effects of population size, age structure, and changing demography on patterns of cultural accumulation and cultural loss.

Curriculum Vitae

Education and Employment

2018Senior Scientist, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig
2017 Postdoctoral researcher, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA and University of St. Andrews, Scotland. 
2014EPSRC 2020 Science Postdoctoral Fellow, CoMPLEX, University College London, UK.
2012 Postdoctoral researcher, Stanford University, USA.
2008 Ph.D. ‘Mathematical and Computational Models of Cultural Evolution’ School of Biology, University of St. Andrews, Scotland. 
2008 Research assistant, University of St. Andrews, Scotland. 
2004 BSc. Double honours in Biology and Theoretical Physics, National University of Ireland, Maynooth.

Teaching and Supervision

2014Designed undergraduate and graduate course: Theoretical Cultural Evolution with Marcus Feldman at Stanford University.
2009 – 2010Graduate teaching assistant University of St. Andrews School of Biology course entitled ‘Animal behaviour, a quantitative approach’. Supervising students’ independent empirical research, analysis, poster design, and thesis writing.
2008 Graduate teaching assistant University of St. Andrews School of Biology first year undergraduate biology course.

Selected Recent Conferences and Workshops

2019Evolution Evolving conference, Cambridge UK
2018 Cultural Evolution Seminar 2018 in the Centrum för evolutionär kulturforskningsamt, Stockholm University, Sweden.
2018 Ecologies of Creativity in Cultural Evolution workshop in Aarhus University, Denmark.
2017 British Applied Mathematics Colloquium, Surrey, UK.
2015 Symposium organiser for ‘Cancer as a Darwinian Process’ at the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution conference, Vienna, Austria.
2015 School of Biological Sciences seminar series, Reading University, U.K.
2015 Culture Conference, Birmingham University, U.K.
2014 Frontiers in Niche Construction: From Theory to Application in the Biological and Social Sciences workshop at the Santa Fe Institute, USA.

Publications

This publication list is currently beeing updated. The process will be finished in a few minutes.

Fogarty, L. (2018). Cultural complexity and evolution in fluctuating environments. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 372, 373(1743)

Fogarty, L. & Creanza, N. (2017) The niche construction of cultural complexity: interactions between innovations, population size, and the environment, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 372: 20160428

Fogarty, L., Wakano, J.Y., Feldman, M.W. & Aoki, K. (2016a) The driving forces of cultural complexity: Neanderthals, modern humans, and the question of population size. Human Nature, doi:10.1007/s12110-016-9275-6

Creanza, N., Fogarty, L. & Feldman, M.W. (2016b) Cultural niche construction of repertoire size and learning strategies in songbirds. Evolutionary Ecology, vol. 30, pp. 285-305.

Fogarty, L., Wakano, J.Y., Feldman, M.W. & Aoki, K. (2015a) Factors limiting the number of independent cultural traits that can be maintained in a population. Learning Strategies and Cultural Evolution during the Palaeolithic. pp 9-21.

Fogarty, L., Creanza, N. & Feldman, M.W. (2015b) Cultural evolutionary perspectives on early human innovation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 30, no. 12, pp. 736-754.

Fogarty, L. The study of teaching needs an inclusive functional definition. Invited commentary on Kline, M.A. (2015c) How to learn about teaching: An evolutionary framework for the study of teaching behavior in humans and other animals. Behavioral and Brain Science, vol. 38, 1-71.

Creanza N, Fogarty L., Feldman MW. (2014) Cultural niche construction from the Paleolithic to modern hunter-gatherers. Dynamics of Learning in Neanderthals and Modern Humans, Vol. 1: Cultural Perspectives. (Joint first authorship).

Fogarty, L., Creanza, N., & Feldman, M. W. (2013). The role of cultural transmission in human demographic change: An age-structured model. Theoretical Population Biology, 88, 68-77.

Mesoudi, A., Blanchet, S., Charmantier, A., Danchin, E., Fogarty, L., Jablonka, E., Laland, K.N., Morgan, T.J.H., Müller, G.B., Odling-Smee, J.F. & Pujol, B. (2013) Is Non-genetic Inheritance Just a Proximate Mechanism? A Corroboration of the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis. Biological Theory, DOI: 10.1007/s13752-013-0091-5.

Creanza, N., Fogarty, L. & Feldman, M.W. (2012) Models of Cultural Niche Construction with Selection and Assortative Mating. PLoS ONE, vol. 7, no. 8, e42744 (Joint first authorship).

Fogarty, L., Rendell, L.E. & Laland, K.N. (2012) The importance of space in models of social learning, cultural evolution and niche construction, Advances in Complex Systems vol. 15, no. 1&2.

Fogarty, L., Rendell, L. & Laland, K.N. (2012) Mental time travel, memory and the social learning strategies tournament, Learning and Motivation, vol. 43, no. 4, pp. 241-246.

Fogarty, L. and Feldman, M.W. (2011) The cultural and demographic evolution of son preference and marriage type in contemporary China. Biological Theory, vol. 3 no. 6, pp. 272-282.

Fogarty, L., Strimling, P. & Laland, K.N. (2011) The evolution of teaching, Evolution, vol. 65, no. 10, pp. 2760-2770.

Rendell, L.E., Boyd, R, Enquist, M., Feldman, M.W., Fogarty, L. & Laland, K.N. (2011) How copying affects the amount, evenness and persistence of cultural knowledge: insights from the social learning strategies tournament, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, vol. 366, pp. 1118-1128.

Rendell, L.E., Fogarty, L., Hoppitt, W.J.E., Morgan, T.J.H., Webster, M.M. & Laland, K.N. (2011) Cognitive culture: Theoretical and empirical insights into social learning strategies, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 15, pp. 68-76.

Rendell, L.E., Fogarty, L. & Laland, KN (2011) Runaway cultural niche construction, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, vol. 366, no. 1566, pp. 823-835.

Rendell, L.E., Boyd, R., Cownden, D., Enquist, M., Eriksson, K., Feldman, M.W., Fogarty, L., Ghirlanda, S., Lillicrap, T. & Laland, K.N. (2010) Why Copy Others? Insights from the Social Learning Strategies Tournament, Science, vol. 328, no. 5975, pp. 208-213.

Rendell, L.E., Fogarty, L. & Laland, K.N. (2010) Rogers' paradox recast and resolved: population structure and the evolution of social learning strategies, Evolution, vol. 64, no. 2, pp. 534-548.

Other Articles

  • Invited entry to the International Encyclopaedia of Social and Behavioural Science, second edition on ‘models of cultural evolution’, published 2014.
  • Invited entry to the Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior on ‘teaching’