john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

White House to recognize open science

Wed, 2013-05-22 13:53 -- John Hawks

The White House is looking to recognize people who are leading in open science efforts, either by providing free access to data or by using data that is already publicly available. I imagine that public education efforts using open data would also qualify for this recognition: "Seeking Outstanding 'Open Science' Champions of Change". The reward is a trip to a White House event June 20.

We are asking for your help to identify “Open Science” Champions of Change—outstanding individuals, organizations, or research projects promoting and using open scientific data for the benefit of society. For example, a Champion’s work may involve:

Providing free access to data or publications generated from scientific research; or

Leading research that uses publically available scientific data.

Anyone can nominate an “Open Science” candidate for consideration by May 23, 2013 (under “Theme of Service,” choose “Open Science”). In the “Reason for Nominating” section of the nomination form, please also include information about any upcoming open-science-related announcements or new steps that the individual or organization you are nominating has planned, which could potentially be launched at the Champions of Change event.

I just found out about this process this morning, but it looks like a constructive step in recognizing people who are moving science in a more open direction. Earlier this year, the White House recommended a new policy on data access, which I found to be very helpful in comparison to the concurrent policy on publication access "White House policy on data access".

Nominations for this honor are due tomorrow (Thursday), using the short online nomination form. I hope many worthy people can be recognized in this way!

New Denisova and Neandertal DNA results reported

Fri, 2013-05-17 08:37 -- John Hawks

Elizabeth Pennisi reports from the Biology of Genomes conference at Cold Spring Harbor, New York: "More Genomes From Denisova Cave Show Mixing of Early Human Groups". The article describes a talk by Svante Pääbo about new results from Neandertal DNA, as well as new analyses of the Denisovan genome. It has lots of details for those interested in these topics, but the article is paywalled, so I can only share a little of it here:

From the detailed genomes of both Neandertals and Denisovans, Pääbo and Montgomery Slatkin of the University of California, Berkeley, estimated that 17% of the Denisovan DNA was from the local Neandertals. And the comparison revealed another surprise: Four percent of the Denisovan genome comes from yet another, more ancient, human—"something unknown," Pääbo reported. "Getting better coverage and more genomes, you can start to see the networks of interactions in a world long ago," says David Kingsley, an evolutionary biologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

With all the interbreeding, "it's more a network than a tree," points out Carles Lalueza-Fox, a paleogeneticist from the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona, Spain. Pääbo hesitates to call Denisovans a distinct species, and the picture is getting more complicated with each new genome.

We have been finding some of this in our comparisons of the genomes also. These were not isolated groups of ancient people, and some of them were more similar to living people than others. It is just wonderful to have more and more DNA coming out -- although that makes it hard to think we won't learn something new from high-coverage data that will require us to re-run various comparisons. That's the cost of discovery!

Meanwhile, the article sheds light on two interesting contradictions in the Denisova data. The analysis of the high-coverage data last fall [1] noted that the pinky bone genome is consistent with a very small long-term effective size, because of its limited genetic variation ("Denisova at high coverage". These results included a "drastic decline in size" around the time the Denisovans were estimated to have separated their population from the ancestors of living sub-Saharan Africans.

That result was curious in comparison with the mtDNA evidence. The Denisovan mtDNA is substantially more divergent from living human and Neandertal mtDNA, with an estimated time for the last common ancestor of mtDNA among these groups a bit more than a million years ago. In the initial analysis of the Denisova genome, Reich and colleagues [2] pointed out that even a deep divergence might be consistent with a neutral population history in a single population. But a population of radically reduced size, with a substantially more recent common ancestry shared with Neandertals and other ancestors of living people? Seems odd.

Now, we may be learning that the Denisovan genome itself represents different ancestral groups -- not only a more ancient "something unknown" population, but substantially the local Neandertals. That kind of mixture is not the population history described by papers on the Denisova genome so far. And a third Denisovan mtDNA from one of the third molars at the site is substantially different from the other two, pointing to greater mtDNA diversity within the Denisovan population than now known from either Neandertals or living people.

What does it mean? I don't think there's a contradiction here in the data. What this shows is that the methods applied to the data have been too simplistic. The methods will come to a result, but that result may not fit the data as well as a population model with more complexity. Looking only at one kind of comparison -- as the Li and Durbin model applied to the Denisova genome by Meyer and colleagues last year [1] -- will probably not give a result that describes the true population history. We need to keep our minds open to more complex population histories that may be more consistent with other sources of data, including archaeological and fossil information.


References

Quote: Phillip Tobias on the study of race

Thu, 2013-05-16 22:15 -- John Hawks

I was doing research on another topic, and ran across an obituary of Phillip Tobias that I hadn't seen: "Phillip Tobias, SA's great scientist and human being, has gone back to earth". I thought this direct quote from Tobias worth sharing:

In a society in which the question of race has come to loom as largely as it does in South Africa, there is, I believe, a positive duty on a scientist who has made a special study of race to make known the facts and the most highly confirmed hypotheses about race, whenever a suitable opportunity presents itself. I should be failing, therefore, in my academic duty, if I were to hold my peace and say nothing about race, simply because the scientific truth about race runs counter to some or all of the assumptions underlying or influencing the race policies of this country. In no field is the need of guidance from qualified scientists more imperative than in this very subject of race.

The rest of the article is really good, as it describes both Tobias' work on fossil hominins and his activism against apartheid.

Earlier: "Paleoanthropologist Phillip V. Tobias dies"

"I Believe in Gene Flow"

Tue, 2013-05-14 23:59 -- John Hawks

Mindy Pitre forwarded me a video done by her undergraduate students at St. Lawrence University, and I just had to share it. It is about as adorable as caveman lovin' can be!

"I Believe in Gene Flow"

She writes: "It was for my Intro to Human Origins at St. Lawrence University. I made them do group raps/songs. They were super creative!"

AAA: "President Obama Supports Scientific Integrity of Anthropology"

Tue, 2013-05-14 19:38 -- John Hawks

The American Anthropological Association blog (on the Huffington Post) included a post last week by AAA President Leith Mullings, commenting on President Obama's address to the National Academy of Sciences: "President Obama Supports Scientific Integrity of Anthropology".

Mullings quotes from President Obama's remarks:

And it's not just resources. I mean, one of the things that I've tried to do over these last four years and will continue to do over the next four years is to make sure that we are promoting the integrity of our scientific process; that not just in the physical and life sciences, but also in fields like psychology and anthropology and economics and political science -- all of which are sciences because scholars develop and test hypotheses and subject them to peer review -- but in all the sciences, we've got to make sure that we are supporting the idea that they're not subject to politics, that they're not skewed by an agenda, that, as I said before, we make sure that we go where the evidence leads us. And that's why we've got to keep investing in these sciences.

The President's comments are important, considering the last few weeks' news of Congressional antipathy toward NSF funding of work in the social sciences. Although many cultural anthropologists consider themselves to be pure humanists and non-scientists, the National Science Foundation does not fund work that is non-scientific in approach. Emphasizing the importance of hypothesis-testing and peer review in anthropology is something I think most anthropologists can rally around.

That sounds like science has to be a part of any viable long-term plan...

Neandertal night on PBS

Tue, 2013-05-14 09:34 -- John Hawks

This Wednesday (May 15) is Neandertal night on PBS stations in the U.S., with two documentary programs covering the last few years of science about these ancient people.

First, the NOVA episode this week is the "Decoding Neandertals" program. This was broadcast earlier this year, and it is a really good summary of some current research into Neandertal genetics and behavior:

Over 60,000 years ago, the first modern humans—people physically identical to us today—left their African homeland and entered Europe, then a bleak and inhospitable continent in the grip of the Ice Age. But when they arrived, they were not alone: the stocky, powerfully built Neanderthals had already been living there for hundred of thousands of years. So what happened when the first modern humans encountered the Neanderthals? Did we make love or war? That question has tantalized generations of scholars and seized the popular imagination. Then, in 2010, a team led by geneticist Svante Paabo announced stunning news. Not only had they reconstructed much of the Neanderthal genome—an extraordinary technical feat that would have seemed impossible only a decade ago—but their analysis showed that "we" modern humans had interbred with Neanderthals, leaving a small but consistent signature of Neanderthal genes behind in everyone outside Africa today. In "Decoding Neanderthals," NOVA explores the implications of this exciting discovery. In the traditional view, Neanderthals differed from "us" in behavior and capabilities as well as anatomy. But were they really mentally inferior, as inexpressive and clumsy as the cartoon caveman they inspired? NOVA explores a range of intriguing new evidence for Neanderthal self-expression and language, all pointing to the fact that we may have seriously underestimated our mysterious, long-vanished human cousins.

Second, a new episode of Secrets of the Dead is being broadcast, titled "Caveman Cold Case", about El Sidron Cave:

A tomb of 49,000 year-old Neanderthal bones discovered in El Sidron, a remote, mountainous region of Northern Spain, leads to a compelling investigation to solve a double mystery: How did this group of Neanderthals die? And, could the fate of this group help explain Neanderthal extinction? Scientists examine the bones—buried over 65 feet below ground—and discover signs that tell a shocking story of how this group of six adults, three teenagers, two children and a baby may have met their death. Some bones have deep cuts, long bones are cracked and skulls crushed—distinct signs of cannibalism. Was it a result of ritual or hunger? Neanderthal experts are adamant that they were not bloodthirsty brutes. Will this investigation challenge their views? What happened here 49000 years ago will take us on a much bigger journey—from El Sidron to the other end of the Iberian Peninsula where scientists are excavating beneath the seas off Gibraltar in search of Neanderthal sites. Scientists working here had theories—but no proof—for why Neanderthals went extinct. El Sidron may change this.

I'm really excited that this one is being broadcast in the U.S. -- it covers the science from a forensic point of view, including new insights about diet and breadth of behavior. It is a great program that goes into the research by Antonio Rosas and Carles Lalueza-Fox on the Spanish Neandertals, and gives us a viewpoint on the Gibraltar Neandertals with Clive Finlayson.

I play a small part in both programs, and I'm happy to see the Neandertals getting such high-profile attention!

Open 3-d archive of Kromdraai

Tue, 2013-05-14 08:38 -- John Hawks

A new paper in the Journal of Human Evolution by Matthew Skinner and colleagues [1] announces the new availability of an open archive of microCT data from the site of Kromdraai, South Africa, with a large collection of hominin specimens curated in Pretoria at the Ditsong National Museum:

Digital representations of vertebrate fossils are quickly becoming a standard source of data for scientific inquiry and non-destructive imaging of the internal structure of fossils is opening up new avenues of research that will further our understanding of fossil taxa. The purpose of this paper is to formally announce the availability of high-resolution microtomographic (microCT) scans of hominin fossils from the site of Kromdraai B (known as the ‘hominin site’, as opposed to Kromdraai A, the ‘faunal site’), South Africa. These microCT scans are the result of a collaborative research project between the curatorial institution of the Kromdraai fossils, the Ditsong National Museum of Natural History (DNMNH; formerly the Transvaal Museum) in Pretoria, South Africa and the Department of Human Evolution of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (MPI-EVA) in Leipzig, Germany.

In publishing these scans, we hope to stimulate research on these important specimens using virtual representations of the original fossils. We also envision that increased access to such data will stimulate additional research requiring study of the original fossils.

This is really an outstanding development, a rich resource for education and further research. I want to congratulate all the people involved!

The CT archive is hosted at the Max Planck Institute website, "DITSONG - CT Archive".

Solving the problem of access has been especially difficult for scan data of hominin fossils. The physical specimens that represent ancient hominins are curated by museums in many countries around the world. Museums and other national institutions have a mission to steward their historical and cultural resources. A central archive, whether from a government sponsor like NSF or from a commercial entity such as Google, would be more convenient for researchers and save facilities and labor costs, but might take away some of the stewardship capability exerted by the separate institutions now. So to see a large institute entering into this kind of collaboration with a prominent national museum in another country makes me hopeful that the field is being persuaded about the benefits of more open access -- especially for educational use.

Paleoanthropology is a comparative science, and good science requires comparing a specimen to the variation across samples of fossils and living primates. This is why casts have had such an important role in the history of the field. The key fossil specimens may never be in the same room with each other, but casts can be brought together for comparisons.

Now with CT data, technology in principle makes it possible for every paleoanthropologist to have an archive of fossil morphology. That has such a potential to save morphologists time and trouble. Simply keying a publicly available 3-d scan model with a label can allow much clearer communication about the form of a trait that may appear ambiguous on a fossil fragment.

So why has this technology taken so long to get into the hands of paleoanthropologists? In 2005, I reflected on an article that forecasted a bright future for CT data archives in paleoanthropology: "Frontiers of human origins". I wrote:

Personally, I think CT will have a limited set of impacts. The best thing is that it will allow any lab in the world to have as full a set of comparative data as have been released. Currently, it's useless for that purpose; there's just not enough access. But that is changing, and CT scans are as useful to a practiced eye as casts -- which are much less available today even as CT increases. In fact, high-resolution CT may essentially end casting of new fossils, since that is one of the major sources of damage. We'll be doing a lot of comparative work with imaging in the future.

There is still not enough access. There are a very limited number of scans of hominin fossils that are openly available for download -- for example, Harvard's Peabody Museum made CT data for the Skhul V cranium available several years ago. Other CT data are available for sale; some are available with a consortium membership, and some can be acquired by direct inquiry to researchers. Right now, a student cannot use these Kromdraai data in comparison with other open fossil data unless that student is well-connected in the hierarchy of paleoanthropology. The day is still far away when every laboratory has access to a useful archive of fossil hominin morphology.


References

Check out Trowelblazers

Sat, 2013-05-11 21:04 -- John Hawks

If you're interested in the history of archaeology, you are going to really love "Trowelblazers", a Tumblr site with short biographies of female trailblazers of archaeology.

Like most good Tumblr accounts, this one has some great pictures. The post on Maeve Leakey has a classic photo from the Turkana Basin Institute, and the Gertrude Bell post is full of information and links.

The sea shall give up her dead

Thu, 2013-05-09 13:56 -- John Hawks

I really like this ScienceNOW account by Traci Watson of new work that has uncovered ancient DNA in deep-seafloor contexts: "Ancient DNA Found Hidden Below Sea Floor". The article covers two studies, including one looking at 11,400-year-old DNA from the abyssal plain, another comparing more ancient and recent Black Sea seafloor samples. The latter study may help to redate the last time the Black Sea basin was flooded from the Mediterranean:

One type of marine fungus, for example, first appeared in the sediments roughly 9600 years ago—exactly when some forms of freshwater plankton and a freshwater mussel vanish, the team reports this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. That suggests that marine waters started to invade the lake roughly 600 years earlier than thought. The team also found DNA from a form of marine alga in 9300-year-old sediments, though the alga doesn’t show up in the fossil record until 2500 years ago, says molecular paleoecologist Marco Coolen of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts and an author of the Black Sea paper.

What a neat project it will be, to explore seafloor DNA for unexpected inclusions. There's a good reason to fund much more work here, given that the 11,400-year horizon where this is already practical is so near the Younger Dryas. We need a fleet of tiny autonomous vessels to find the interesting stuff -- we can call them, "Glomar Venters"!

Eugenie Scott to retire from NCSE

Mon, 2013-05-06 14:37 -- John Hawks

Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, has announced that she will retire by the end of this year.

"It's a good time to retire, with our new climate change initiative off to a strong start and with the staff energized and excited by the new challenges ahead," she commented. "The person who replaces me will find a strong staff, a strong set of programs, and a strong board of directors."

The NCSE has been central to defending the teaching of evolution in public K-12 schools in the U.S., and provides many free resources for teachers, parents and students. Scott has done a tremendous amount to increase the organization's profile and service. As a former president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, she has consistently helped to keep human evolution and human biology important parts of NCSE's outreach efforts.

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Civic allometry

Sun, 2013-05-05 22:31 -- John Hawks

An interesting article from Smithsonian magazine, about the mathematical study of cities: "Life in the city is essentially one giant math problem".

Here's a passage quoting Geoffrey West, about the ways that different measures of a city exhibit allometry with population size:

Remarkably, this phenomenon applies to cities all over the world, of different sizes, regardless of their particular history, culture or geography. Mumbai is different from Shanghai is different from Houston, obviously, but in relation to their own pasts, and to other cities in India, China or the U.S., they follow these laws. “Give me the size of a city in the United States and I can tell you how many police it has, how many patents, how many AIDS cases,” says West, “just as you can calculate the life span of a mammal from its body mass.”

I've heard West speak about this population allometry. Obviously some of the most interesting cases are those where a city mismatches the expected relationships. But it is fascinating the way that so many aspects scale with a positive allometry -- getting proportionally greater as city size increases.

My open letter to SJSU Philosophy

Sat, 2013-05-04 15:29 -- John Hawks

On Thursday, the Philosophy department of San José State University released an open letter to Michael Sandel, instructor of a Harvard edX MOOC. I reacted to the letter in my post, "Lessons in social justice from MOOCs". I combined a statement of approval for the SJSU department's aims with some pointed disagreement about the logic behind their arguments.

Since that post, I have gotten questions from several people asking me to expand upon my comments. One of the faculty members in the SJSU philosophy department, Janet Stemwedel, is a friend and blogger, who herself pointed to her department's open letter: "My department and a MOOC". My own role at UW-Madison is broader than my development of the MOOC course ("Announcing my MOOC, Human Evolution: Past and Future"), I have also been involved in faculty discussions about the role of online education more generally. With this dual role, I wanted to take some time to detail how I believe MOOCs may fit within higher education and how faculty governance should react to technological innovations and funding challenges.

I have framed my comments as an open letter in reply to that from the SJSU philosophers (at the Chronicle of Higher Education, "An Open Letter to Professor Michael Sandel From the Philosophy Department at San Jose State U.".

My open letter

Let me reiterate that I support your department's position, and hope that you are successful in pressuring your administration to support your teaching mission more effectively. I take an active interest not only as a MOOC instructor but also because I am chair of the curriculum committee of my college. Our major issue this year has been the role of online learning in our programs and departments. These interests have made me examine the open letter very closely. While I agree with much of it, I disagree strongly with its premise and central claim that MOOC developers like me are endangering education. Your department's letter is not the first to spread this mischaracterization, but as an open letter to a MOOC instructor, it targets me directly. Having been miscast in the role of department-dismantler, I feel I must speak out.

I have been watching developments in California, where the discussion of MOOCs has focused so strongly on both economic and pedagogical issues. Like San José State, UW-Madison also has many online degree programs and blended courses, and a large fraction of our classroom-based courses use online elements. This is not at all new, and we emphasize serving our student community better by providing flexibilities and access to information that we cannot easily provide in the classroom. At UW-Madison, we are very cognizant of other UW institutions with different missions and student populations, including some very popular online degree programs. These now include a state-level initiative to establish a new "flex degree" that would provide an avenue for people to receive a degree by applying real-world experience. As in California, Wisconsin institutions are working to find the best way to serve our students and advance our mission in this changing landscape.

The best parts of the open letter emphasize your department's teaching strengths, service to your diverse student community, and importance of online innovations in your own teaching. You don't need to offer Sandel's MOOC, JusticeX, because you are doing a better job in your mission than his course could do. I share your department's concern that curricular changes be approved and directed by faculty, not administrators.

"Knee-jerk guild thinking"

But I think some other parts of the letter misfire. Critically, the letter neglects entirely the major contribution of faculty oversight to the accreditation process. The parts of the letter that address public versus private universities have many omissions, and are ultimately counter-productive by raising the specter of elitism. In reality, public universities, including some small public universities, have been among the earliest innovators of massive online courses. Also, by framing the issue around this Harvard edX course, the letter neglects the participation of the University of California in edX. Here you miss an opportunity to clarify your position. Would your department be just as resistant to a MOOC created with the use of California tax dollars? I suspect it would, just as I sense that many of the "well-funded" versus "poorly-funded" arguments are oblique references to the very specific UC versus CSU divide. Illuminating those issues more concretely would have strengthened the letter more than the hand-waving arguments about employers wanting job training instead of liberal education. In surveys of employers who actually hire our students, we find quite the opposite: Employers want college graduates to have the thinking and writing abilities instilled by a liberal education.

I disagree most strongly with the letter's final call to action:

"It is in a spirit of respect and collegiality that we are urging you, and all professors involved with the sale and promotion of edX-style courses, not to take away from students in public universities the opportunity for an education beyond mere jobs training. Professors who care about public education should not produce products that will replace professors, dismantle departments, and provide a diminished education for students in public universities."

That final paragraph, like the letter, is addressed to Sandel. As a result, it targets me and anyone who is creating open educational resources. Your department's letter urges me to stop creating my MOOC. It claims that my course "will replace professors, dismantle departments, and provide a diminished education for students in public universities."

I disagree.

This is knee-jerk guild thinking. It says that I should serve the interests of tenured professors at other institutions before I serve my own students, my discipline, or the public.

With its open letter, your department is promoting among the public a misconception that I and other MOOC instructors are destroying the value of a traditional education. My interpretation is not a misreading, it is an inevitable consequence of the department's decision to write an open letter addressed to the instructor of a MOOC. That's me.

Learning with a MOOC

I have obligations to the public, who provide me a job, facilities, funding, and paid for my training. I have obligations to my own teachers, who generously shared their time and wisdom far beyond the strict requirements of any mere job. I have obligations to my department and to my university, to advance their missions and make the best use of their resources. I have an obligation to my students, to make the most effective use of my training and technology to involve them in the forefront of learning, including the research in my discipline. If I followed the call to action in the open letter, I would be cheating all these people.

My MOOC course will incorporate footage and interviews from the field, graduate student field journals, and some massive participatory science that involves students directly in research. This investment will yield many beneficial effects: My classroom courses will use some of the material in a blended format, some materials will plug into the new K-12 Next Generation Science Standards, we will publish and share research on the MOOC itself, and those insights will help improve existing courses and develop new courses for our UW-Madison students, including in my own department. This is a really good investment of our resources. It serves our own students and the public of Wisconsin, our research mission, and an international audience who may lack the resources to attend any institution of higher education.

Neither I nor anyone else is imagining that another institution will take my MOOC, clap on a teaching assistant, and charge students tuition to take it. I personally think such a plan would cheat students by charging them for learning they could do for free.

Still, I can imagine other scenarios that I would heartily encourage. For example, an instructor who is conducting field research for five weeks during the regular semester, might use five weeks of my MOOC as instructional materials during that time, supervised by a local TA. That would allow the instructor to bring more research experiences into the classroom, and probably would allow that instructor to provide deeper coverage of some topics where my resources are strong. The materials will be open, and I want other professors to use them to improve their students' experiences and their own opportunities. The flexibility of the open approach makes such uses possible, yet necessarily creates the risk that an institution will attempt to capitalize on the content by charging students for a credential in exchange for minimal additional instruction. If the alternative is that students at a small institution have no ability to integrate the subject of human evolution into their degree program, I wonder if this "risk" is a bug or a feature.

The problem of the pre-packaged course

Your department's open letter is focused on the use of "pre-packaged courses", because of the particular situation your department faces. Although I agree with your department's position, I note that this problem is neither new nor limited to MOOCs. The same problem has most notably been associated with textbooks. An instructor that adopts a commercial textbook may now be offered a package that include online lectures, quizzes, exercises, Powerpoint presentations, and study forums. These resources are neither open nor gratis. The costs are directly borne by students, through high textbook prices, which they pay over and above any tuition and fees. A department that adopts a mandatory textbook for its introductory course is essentially requiring its students to subsidize a "pre-packaged course", supervised by a local instructor, who may or may not be a professor with expertise in the subject. I do not have a general attitude about whether a MOOC should fit a similar role as textbooks for professors who are not content experts. But I do believe we are better off having more free and open high-quality learning resources, and that any learning resources should be used in for-credit courses only with faculty oversight.

At UW-Madison we have discussed this issue extensively as part of our discussions about online learning. Neither my college nor university advocate a one-size-fits-all approach to this question, as we leave the judgment about course materials to departments and faculty with oversight from cross-department faculty committees. Many commenters on the MOOC phenomenon fail to note the extensive history of using non-classroom experiences within college degree programs. We already accept transfer credit from a wide range of institutions, under long-standing higher education agreements, which include online and distance courses. We provide ways for students to receive academic credit for examinations (such as the AP tests), and we facilitate students carrying out academic projects in conjunction with service learning, internships, and field experiences. Whether or not we eventually accept MOOCs for credit, they will have to follow the same governance and oversight structures as these other long-established mechanisms.

Intrinsic to that oversight process is an unhindered ability of faculty to say, "no." Again, I applaud your department for making its pedagogical decision clear, based on the needs of SJSU students and the broader learning community. Your department is showing that the system works, a demonstration more important than the specifics of this single case. I hope that your administrators hear your message clearly.

Still, I hope the next department to say, "no", can find a way to do so without asking innovators to stop.

Paleo and "physical culture" movements

Sat, 2013-05-04 12:01 -- John Hawks

NPR has a short piece with an interesting historical story about old-time back-to-nature fitness fanatics: "Paleo Diet Echoes Physical Culture Movement Of Yesteryear"

As Hamilton Stapell, a historian at the State University of New York, New Paltz, found when he went digging into the archives of physical culture, there are striking resemblances to the paleo movement today. And, he argues, this shows that people seem to romanticize a healthier past in the midst of great societal upheaval: the Industrial Revolution, in the case of physical culture; and the digital revolution, in the case of paleo.

I don't think this specific link is very persuasive, there have been "go back to the good old days" movements since the dawn of time. Most of them have had no basis in anthropological science.

All the paleonews that's fit to print

Sat, 2013-05-04 10:53 -- John Hawks

The New York Times joins the Neandertal anti-defamation league with an editorial by David Frayer: "Who’re You Calling a Neanderthal?".

Neanderthals lived much richer lives than ever presumed. They were not exactly like us, but they bred with us and their genes and behavior are part of our heritage. So, be careful when you call someone a Neanderthal. You’re speaking about part of yourself.

Frayer covers many of the last 5 years of discoveries of Neandertal cultural complexity, as well as the genetics. Now if only the newspaper would rein in Maureen Dowd, who has been one of the media's most frequent Neandertal-bashers.

Lessons in social justice from MOOCs

Fri, 2013-05-03 00:34 -- John Hawks

The Philosophy department at San Jose State University have written an open letter to Michael Sandel, a Harvard teacher of government and lauded lecturer. Why is this news? Because Sandel is the teacher of one of a massive open online course (MOOC), and the San Jose philosophers don't want to use his materials in their courses. The New York Times and Chronicle of Higher Education cover the story, and the Chronicle has published the open letter..

From the Times account:

“The move to MOOCs comes at great peril to our university,” the letter said, “We regard such courses as a serious compromise of quality of education and, ironically for a social justice course, a case of social injustice.”

While expressing respect for Dr. Sandel’s scholarship and teaching, it also chided him, saying, “Professors who care about public education should not produce products that will replace professors, dismantle departments and provide a diminished education for student in public universities.”

I basically agree with these philosophy professors. As their letter makes clear, these philosophers are already making extensive use of blended learning and online materials in their courses. They object to having their work outsourced. I would go further: They should not shirk their jobs to guarantee the quality of education for their students, and the accreditation of San Jose State depends on them doing that job properly.

But they use faulty arguments in their letter. If a department is so dysfunctional that it is endangered by some YouTube videos, it probably needs to be dismantled. And surely it is a perverted idea of "social justice" to demand that a professor stop providing a free public good, just because professors at other institutions feel threatened?

They would be better served to document the ways they advance learning, making it clear why those functions cannot be replaced wholesale by an online resource. As for my MOOC, I hope the materials will be reused as widely as possible.

Science and piracy

Fri, 2013-05-03 00:21 -- John Hawks

Paul Salopek has a story for National Geographic about the impact of Somali pirates on oceanographic science: "A Hidden Victim of Somali Pirates: Science". One of the most important scientific projects on the continental shelf off East Africa is drilling for sediment cores to examine ancient climates and volcanism. This helps us to understand the environmental context for early human evolution.

"This problem has been going on a long time and with virtually no public awareness," says Sarah Feakins, a researcher at the University of Southern California whose work on paleoclimates has been hijacked by piracy fears. "All kinds of efforts are made to keep the commercial sea lanes around Somalia open. Nobody talks about the lost science."

The later part of the article describes the loss of routine weather reports from ships, as they choose against broadcasting their locations to eavesdropping pirates.

Of Jamestown and Neandertals

Wed, 2013-05-01 16:07 -- John Hawks

About why cannibalism is a widespread human behavior in times of stress, new evidence emerges from a trash pit at Colonial Jamestown: "Evidence of Cannibalism Found at Jamestown Site".

It is unclear how the young girl died but she was probably dead already and even buried before being butchered. According to a letter written in 1625 by George Percy, president of Jamestown during the starvation period, the famine was so intense “thatt notheinge was Spared to mainteyne Lyfe and to doe those things which seame incredible, as to digge upp deade corpes outt of graves and to eate them.”

#spaceape

Tue, 2013-04-30 15:33 -- John Hawks

I've been moving rather slowly on writing up my reaction to the Observer article on the high-profile aquatic ape theory symposium that's soon to unwind in London, but this weekend there was a hilarious Twitter reaction to the news: evolution researchers and enthusiasts from all over the world began thinking of reasons why human traits are unique adaptations to a deep space environment. Kate Wong today writes up the story: "Space Ape Parody Shows Why Aquatic Ape Theory Is All Wet".

On April 27 the Guardian ran a story on the aquatic ape theory, highlighting a symposium that will be held in London May 8 – 9 to “explore new research and evidence which suggests that at some stage during the last few million years, our human ancestors were exposed to a period of semiaquatic evolution which led to the acquisition of unique and primordial human characteristics.“ That story and other media coverage of the aquatic ape idea inspired anthropologist Brenna Hassett to propose a satirical alternative to the watery fringe theory in her blog the following day. Thus the space ape theory was born.

Hasset's post explaining the concept is here: "#aquaticape vs #spaceape : evolutionary theory death match?" The hashtag #spaceape is still going strong on Twitter, and maybe there will be some more creative ones. Let me just point out how much sense this makes of our very spherical heads!

Brains in a haystack

Tue, 2013-04-30 09:45 -- John Hawks

An essay by Gary Marcus, in the new online science magazine, Nautilus: "Where uniqueness lies".

In short, humans may live very differently than chimpanzees, but the structural plans of our biology necessarily can represent only modest tinkerings to the genetic material that we inherited from our last common ancestors. Language, regardless of how it is instantiated in our brain, represents a comparatively tiny cognitive enhancement relative to the mental machinery we inherited from our last common ancestor. The same is true for the underlying biology of each of our cognitive innovations.

If it seems like scientists trying to find the basis of human uniqueness in the brain are looking for a neural needle in a haystack, it’s because they are. Whatever makes us different is built on the bedrock of a billion years of common ancestry.

A lot of what's interesting about humans is because we reuse the ancient systems of our brains in new ways. Technology and culture both help us to exploit systems shared much more broadly among animals. This greatly complicates our attempts to show what is really different about the biology of the human lineage, because shallow differences based on recent behavioral innovations abound.

Boning up on British history

Tue, 2013-04-30 09:10 -- John Hawks

From The Guardian: "Richard III archaeologists to return to Leicester site in search of lost knight".

This time the team is applying to the Home Office for an exhumation licence for a lead-lined stone sarcophagus, which they believe holds the undisturbed remains of Sir William Moton, believed to have been buried at Grey Friars in 1362.

...

The original dig was funded by the Richard III Society, but the next phase will be paid for by the university and city council, which is predicting a tourism bonanza from the discovery.

My rule of thumb: When British people are doing something ghoulish because they predict a "tourism bonanza", look around for a blue police box.

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Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.