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Social and ecological dynamics of forager mobility: An agent-based modeling study of Middle Stone Age archaeology in southern AfricaPeart, Daniel Chad January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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THE IMPACT OF THE MEDIEVAL CLIMATIC ANOMALY ON THE ARCHAEOLOGY AT EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASEPorter-Rodriguez, Jessica Amanda 01 June 2017 (has links)
A series of severe and prolonged droughts occurred throughout the Northern Hemisphere between approximately 1150 BP to 600 BP. This phenomenon is referred to as the Medieval Climatic Anomaly and has been shown to have differentially impacted various regions of the world. Previous studies have suggested causal links between the Medieval Climatic Anomaly and observed culture change.
The goal of this study was to examine the Antelope Valley region of the Mojave Desert for evidence of impacts on human populations related to the Medieval Climatic Anomaly. To achieve this goal, a sample selection of archaeological sites was chosen from lands within Edwards Air Force Base. These sites represented occupations which occurred immediately before, during, and after the Medieval Climatic Anomaly. Site assemblages were analyzed and compared by cultural period, with cross-comparisons made of artefactual and ecofactual constituents. Site densities and areal extents were also examined and compared.
These analyses showed the emergence of trends concurrent with the introduction of the Medieval Climatic Anomaly. The data supports the hypothesis that humans who populated the Antelope Valley region of the Mojave Desert during this period may have engaged in population aggregation, with a tethered nomadism subsistence strategy. The data also shows evidence that upon the amelioration of the environment after the Medieval Climatic Anomaly, site characteristics within the region saw a significant shift.
While the evidence generated by this study does suggest a link between climatic change experienced during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly and change observed within the archaeology of the Antelope Valley, it does not suggest climate as a sole, or even primary, causal factor. Rather, the intent of this study was to identify one possible variable responsible for observed change that occurred in the region. With this in mind, the Medieval Climatic Anomaly was found to have been significant enough to have either directly or indirectly impacted the prehistoric occupants of the study region.
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Late Pleistocene Hunter-Gatherer Settlement and Ecology of the Romanian Carpathians and Adjacent AreasJanuary 2015 (has links)
abstract: Despite nearly five decades of archaeological research in the Romanian Carpathian basin and adjacent areas, how human foragers organized their stone artifact technologies under varying environmental conditions remains poorly understood.
Some broad generalizations have been made; most work in the region is concerned primarily with descriptive and definitional issues rather than efforts to explain past human behavior or human-environmental interactions. Modern research directed towards understanding human adaptation to different environments remains in its infancy. Grounded in the powerful conceptual framework of evolutionary ecology and utilizing recent methodological advances, this work has shown that shifts in land-use strategies changes the opportunities for social and biological interaction among Late Pleistocene hominins in western Eurasia, bringing with it a plethora of important consequences for cultural and biological evolution.
I employ, in my Dissertation, theoretical and methodological advances derived from human behavioral ecology (HBE) and lithic technology organization to show how variability in lithic technology can explain differences in technoeconomic choices and land-use strategies of Late Pleistocene foragers in Romanian Carpathians Basin and adjacent areas. Set against the backdrop of paleoenvironmental change, the principal questions I addressed are whether or not technological variation at the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic can account for fundamental changes at its end.
The analysis of the Middle and Upper Paleolithic strata, from six archaeological sites, shows that the lithic industries were different not because of biocultural differences in technological organization, landuse strategies, and organizational flexibility. Instead the evidence suggests that technoeconomic strategies, the intensity of artifact curation and how foragers used the land appear to have been more closely related to changing environmental conditions, task-specific activities, and duration of occupation. This agrees well with the results of studies conducted in other areas and with those predicted from theoretically-derived models based on evolutionary ecology. My results lead to the conclusion that human landuse effectively changes the environment of selection for hominins and their lithic technologies, an important component of the interface between humans and the natural world. Foragers move across the landscape in comparable ways in very different ecological settings, cross-cutting both biological morphotypes and prehistorian-defined analytical units. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2015
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Evolving Models From Observed Human PerformanceFernlund, Hans Karl Gustav 01 January 2004 (has links)
To create a realistic environment, many simulations require simulated agents with human behavior patterns. Manually creating such agents with realistic behavior is often a tedious and time-consuming task. This dissertation describes a new approach that automatically builds human behavior models for simulated agents by observing human performance. The research described in this dissertation synergistically combines Context-Based Reasoning, a paradigm especially developed to model tactical human performance within simulated agents, with Genetic Programming, a machine learning algorithm to construct the behavior knowledge in accordance to the paradigm. This synergistic combination of well-documented AI methodologies has resulted in a new algorithm that effectively and automatically builds simulated agents with human behavior. This algorithm was tested extensively with five different simulated agents created by observing the performance of five humans driving an automobile simulator. The agents show not only the ability/capability to automatically learn and generalize the behavior of the human observed, but they also capture some of the personal behavior patterns observed among the five humans. Furthermore, the agents exhibited a performance that was at least as good as agents developed manually by a knowledgeable engineer.
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Human behavioral response to the Younger Dryas in North Alabama: An analysis of the Richard L. Kilborn collectionBarlow, Robert A 09 August 2019 (has links)
This study is a collections-based project that employs approximately 1,300 projectile points to investigate behavioral response to the Younger Dryas in north Alabama (12,900 to 11,700 BP). I apply a version of the marginal value theorem to determine how changing resource structures caused changes in projectile point technology. I argue that changes in technology during the Younger Dryas were not conditioned by access or availability of lithic raw material. Instead, variation in technology is likely a response to changes in return rates from hunting and foraging. Further, the changes in hunting return rates correlate with changes in north Alabama forest structure, which were conditioned by the Younger Dryas. To this end, I argue that the sustained impact of the Younger Dryas, and subsequent Holocene warming, had an effect on the subsistence economies of hunter-gatherers living in northern Alabama during this time, which is exhibited by changes in projectile point technology.
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Mate Selection Preferences of Senescing Adults in Cincinnati, OhioRaterman, Jessica January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Spatial and temporal modelling for automatic human behavioral analysisZhao, Ruiqi January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Costly Signaling and Prey Choice: the Signaling Value of Hunted GameJanuary 2019 (has links)
abstract: For most of human history hunting has been the primary economic activity of men. Hunted animals are valued for their food energy and nutrients, however, hunting is associated with a high risk of failure. Additionally, large animals cannot be consumed entirely by the nuclear family, so much of the harvest may be shared to others. This has led some researchers to ask why men hunt large and difficult game. The “costly signaling” and “show-off” hypotheses propose that large prey are hunted because the difficulty of finding and killing them is a reliable costly signal of the phenotypic quality of the hunter.
These hypotheses were tested using original interview data from Aché (hunter gatherer; n=52, age range 50-76, 46% female) and Tsimané (horticulturalist; n=40, age range 15-77, 45% female) informants. Ranking tasks and paired comparison tasks were used to determine the association between the costs of killing an animal and its value as a signal of hunter phenotypic quality for attracting mates and allies. Additional tasks compared individual large animals to groups of smaller animals to determine whether assessments of hunters’ phenotypes and preferred status were more impacted by the signal value of the species or by the weight and number of animals killed.
Aché informants perceived hunters who killed larger or harder to kill animals as having greater provisioning ability, strength, fighting ability, and disease susceptibility, and preferred them as mates and allies. Tsimané informants held a similar preference for hunters who killed large game, but not for hunters targeting hard to kill species. When total biomass harvested was controlled, both populations considered harvesting more animals in a given time period to be a better signal of preferred phenotypes than killing a single large and impressive species. Male and female informants both preferred hunters who consistently brought back small game over hunters who sometimes killed large animals and sometimes killed nothing. No evidence was found that hunters should forgo overall food return rates in order to signal phenotypic qualities by specializing on large game. Nutrient provisioning rather than costly phenotypic signaling was the strategy preferred by potential mates and allies. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2019
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”Osynliga regler på bensinstation” : En studie om applicering av regel kan skapa ordning genom rumsliga element vid vägledning och att förändra människor beteende för illegal parkering på en bensinstation.Trinh, Bosco January 2022 (has links)
Denna kandidatuppsats handlar om informationsdesign med fokus på rumslig design. Syftet med denna studie handlar om att undersöka och förstå människors beteende när det gäller att välja en parkeringsplats. Detta kan påverka trafikstopp och de orienterings strategier som finns på en bensinstation. I studien har relevant kurslitteratur använts inom informationsdesign som navigationssystem, orienterbarhet, wayfinding/wayshowing, färg och perception som grundteorier. Med kombinerade metoder som omvärldsanalys, platsanalys och kvalitativ intervju har använts genom arbetet. För tas fram ett gestaltningsförslag som eventuell kan lösa de befintliga problem som bensinstationen har, samt en framtiddesign. Gestaltningsförslag innehåller tydliga informationsskyltar såväl som vägmarkeringar, förbättrat trafikflöde och troligtvis minska förvirring samt osäkerhet hos nya- och stamkunder. Med tillämpade regler och riktlinjer skapas en ny rumsupplevelse med ordning och struktur. / This candidate's thesis is about information design with a focus on spatial design. The purpose of this study is to research and understand people's behavior, when it comes to choosing a parking space that can affect traffic stops and the orientation strategies at a gas station. The study has used relevant course literature within informationsdesign field, such as navigation systems, orientability, wayfinding/wayshowing, color and perception as basic theories. Combined methods such as environmental analysis, location analysis and qualitative interview have been used throughout the thesis. To come up with a design proposal that could possibly solve the existing problems the petrol station has. The design proposal included clear information signs as well as visible road markings. This is to improve traffic flow and reduce confusion and uncertainties among new and regular customers. With applied rules and guidelines created a new spatial experience which can contribute order and structure within this area.
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The Role of Selectivity on Alaskan Fuel Management StrategiesCrawford, Laura J., Dr January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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