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Homology Workshop Participants (from left to right, starting with back row): David Lewkowicz, Mark Blumberg, Lorraine Bahrick, Jason Clark, Bob Lickliter, David Moore, Paul Griffiths, Thomas Suddendorf, Michael Anderson, George Michel, Frances Champagne, Brian Hall, Chris Moore
Homology Workshop Participants
- David S. Moore, Pitzer College and Claremont Graduate University (USA): Importing the homology concept from evolutionary biology into developmental psychology
- Brian K. Hall, Dalhousie University (Canada): Assessing homology at different levels of the biological hierarchy
- Paul E. Griffiths, University of Sydney (Australia): Information, homology, and Lehrman's dictum
- Jason A. Clark, University of Osnabreuck (Germany): Evolutionary and developmental homologies between basic and higher-cognitive emotions
- Thomas Suddendorf, University of Queensland (Australia): Newborn imitation and cognitive development
- Chris Moore, Dalhousie University (Canada): Joint attention and homology
- Mark S. Blumberg, University of Iowa (USA): How will behavioral homology survive in an age of developmental plasticity?
- George F. Michel, University of North Carolina, Greensboro (USA): The concept of homology in the development of behavior
- Frances A. Champagne, Columbia University (USA): Epigenetics and developmental plasticity
- Robert Lickliter and Lorraine Bahrick, Florida International University (USA): Development across the life-span: The case of intersensory perception
- David J. Lewkowicz, Florida Atlantic University (USA): Can the concept of behavioral homology be useful in the study of perceptual development?
- Michael L. Anderson, Franklin & Marshall College (USA): Neural reuse in the evolution and development of the brain