organization:university of st andrews

  • News Feature: Can animal culture drive evolution?
    http://www.pnas.org/content/114/30/7734.full

    Killer whales, also known as orcas (Orcinus orca), have a geographic range stretching from the Antarctic to the Arctic. As a species, their diet includes birds, fish, mammals, and reptiles. But as individuals, they typically fall into groups with highly specialized diets and hunting traditions passed down over generations. Increasingly, scientists refer to these learned feeding strategies as #culture, roughly defined as information that affects behavior and is passed among individuals and across generations through social learning, such as teaching or imitation.

    Scientists once placed culture squarely in the human domain. But discoveries in recent decades suggest that a wide range of cultural practices—from foraging tactics and vocal displays to habitat use and play—may influence the lives of other animals as well. Studies attribute additional orca behaviors, such as migration routes and song repertoires, to culture. Other research suggests that a finch’s song, a chimpanzee’s nut cracking, and a guppy’s foraging route are all manifestations of culture. Between 2012 and 2014, over 100 research groups published work on animal culture covering 66 species, according to a recent review.

    Now, scientists are exploring whether culture may shape not only the lives of nonhuman animals but the evolution of a species. “Culture affects animals’ lives and their survival and their fitness,” says the review’s coauthor, behavioral scientist Andrew Whiten of the University of St Andrews in Scotland. “We’ve learned that’s the case to an extent that could hardly have been appreciated half a century ago.” Based on work in whales, dolphins, and birds, some researchers contend that animal culture is likely a common mechanism underlying animal evolution. But testing this hypothesis remains a monumental challenge.

  • Visual Representation in the Work of Joseph Roth, 1923-1932
    Thesis submitted to the University of St Andrews for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
    https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/10023/317/THESIS_FINAL_07.pdf;jsessionid=2230114D820D3396888


    Une analyse des images textuelles dans l’oeuvre du plus grand auteur journalistique de langue allemande. C’est particulièrement intéressant parce qu’il semble qu’il ait utilisé une approche déscriptive couramment employée de nos jours . Ainsi il n’est pas exclu qu’on lui découvre la qualité de précurseur pour le journalisme qu’on attribue à Goya pour la peinture.

    Through an examination of Joseph Roth’s reportage and fiction published between 1923 and 1932, this thesis seeks to provide a systematic analysis of a particular aspect of the author’s literary style, namely his use of sharply focused visual representations, which are termed Heuristic Visuals . Close textual analysis, supplemented by insights from reader-response theory, psychology, psycholinguistics and sociology illuminate the function of these visual representations.

    The thesis also seeks to discover whether there are significant differences and correspondences in the use of visual representations between the reportage and fiction genres.

    Roth believed that writers should be engagiert , and that the truth could
    only be arrived at through close observation of reality, not subordinated to theory.

    Je n’ai pas encore lu le texte entier, mais il est trés prometteur.

    #littérature #journalisme #Joseph_Roth #data_journalism #photographie

  • Coalition for a Conflict-Free St Andrews gets the go ahead

    Une initiative extrêmement intéressante, à suivre de près

    http://www.thesaint-online.com/2012/07/coalition-for-a-conflict-free-st-andrews-gets-the-go-ahead
    July 3, 201

    Following reports of an unprecedented increase of violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) recently, the Coalition for a Conflict-free St Andrews has achieved a major step in making the University of St Andrews’ campus conflict-free. Having had continuous meetings with the University’s Principal, Louise Richardson, as well as the former President of the Student Association, Patrick O’Hare, the Coalition has succeeded in encouraging the University of St Andrews to add a clause about conflict minerals in its procurement policy, and has become the 2nd university, after Clark University, to do so.

    This achievement is extremely notable, with Bennett Collins, a STAND member and Coalition for a Conflict-Free St Andrews activist, recently stating to The Saint: “This is a major landmark for the Conflict-Free Campus Initiative. We are the 11th institution in the world to do something about conflict minerals, we are the 2nd institution besides Clark University to incorporate conflict minerals into its procurement policy, and we are the first to show that this initiative can be done outside the North American academic system.”