FEATURED AUTHOR
Richard McElreath
I am an evolutionary ecologist who studies humans.
Biography
I am an evolutionary ecologist who studies humans. My main interest is in how the evolution of fancy social learning in humans accounts for the unusual nature of human adaptation and extraordinary scale and variety of human societies. Humans are more widespread and successful than any other vertebrate. Simultaneously, humans are unlike any other animal in that we cooperate in very large groups of unrelated individuals. I and my colleagues use formal evolutionary models, experiments and ethnographic fieldwork to address these puzzles.Websites
Books
Videos
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 01
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 02
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 03
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 04
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 05
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 06
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 07
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 08
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 09
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 10
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 11
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 12
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 13
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 14
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 15
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 16 part 1
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 16 part 2
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 17
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 18
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 19
Published: Dec 03, 2015
Statistical Rethinking - Lecture 20
Published: Dec 03, 2015