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Address:
Kruijt Gebouw Room O 211
Padualaan 8
3584 CH Utrecht
The Netherlands
telephone: +31-30-2535405
fax: +31-30-2521105
email: E.H.M.Sterck@uu.nl
Brief biography
2002-now Associate professor, Behavioural
Biology, Utrecht University
1993 - 2002 Assistant professor, Behavioural Biology,
Utrecht University
Thesis defence in 1995, Utrecht University
1988 - 1992 PhD research NWO-WOTRO, research in Indonesia at
the Ketambe Research Station, Gunung Leuser National Park,
Aceh.
1980 - 1988 Biology, Master Degree, Utrecht University
1978 - 1982 Pharmacy, Bachelor Degree, Utrecht
University
Main research
interest
My research concerned testing and
developing of socioecological theories of primate social
behaviour. These theories identify evolutionary forces that
explain extant social behaviour. These forces are predation
risk, food competition and social and sexual strategies of
conspecifics.
My current interest concerns primate
social cognition. Primates are an excellent group of animals
to study the effect of social cognitive capacities on social
behaviour. They exhibit a highly interesting gradient in
social cognitive capacities: humans certainly possess the
most advanced type, namely Theory of Mind. Our nearest
relatives, the apes (e.g. chimpanzees), may possess some
elementary form of this capacity, while this is probably
lacking in our more distant relatives, the monkeys (e.g.
macaques). This gradient allows for a comparative
approach.
Key
publications (latest update
18-12-2008)
- Sterck, E.H.M., Watts, D.P. & van
Schaik, C.P. (1997) The evolution of female social
relationships in nonhuman primates. Behavioural Ecology
and Sociobiology 41: 291-309.
- Sterck, E.H.M. (1997) Determinants of
female transfer in Thomas langurs (Presbytis thomasi).
American Journal of Primatology 42: 179-198.
- Sterck, E.H.M. (1998) Female
dispersal, social organization and infanticide in
langurs. Are they linked to human disturbance? American
Journal of Primatology 44: 235-254.
- Sterck, E.H.M. (1999) Variation in
langur social organization in relation to the
socioecological model, human habitat alteration and
phylogenetic constraints. Primates 40: 199-213.
- Sterck, E.H.M. & Korstjens, A.H.
(2000) Female dispersal and infanticide avoidance in
primates. In: Infanticide by males and its implications.
C. P. van Schaik & C. H.Janson (eds.) Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, pp. 293 - 321.
- Wich, S. A. , Assink and Sterck, E.
H. M. (2004) Thomans langurs (Presbytis thomasi)
discriminate between calls of young solitary versus older
group-living males: a factor in avoiding infanticide?
Behaviour141(1): 41-51.
- Sterck, E.H.M., Willems, E.P., van
Hooff, J.A.R.A.M and Wich, S.A. (2005) Female dispersal,
inbreeding avoidance and mate choice in Thomas Langurs
(Presbytis thomasi). Behaviour 142: 845-868
- Koski, SE & Sterck, EHM (2007)
Triadic post-conflict affiliation in captive chimpanzees;
does consolation console? Animal Behaviour 73:
133-142.
List of
publications
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