The Social Brawn Hypothesis: effects of sociality on energy, fatigue and performance in exercise

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The Social Brawn Hypothesis: effects of sociality on energy, fatigue and performance in exercise

Event Date

Thursday, April 1, 2021 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm

Dr. Emma Cohen will be talking about her research at this CEMinar. Emma researches the evolution and psychology of social behaviour, including developmental and cross-cultural perspectives. All projects are collaborative within the context of the Social Body Lab, which she leads at University of Oxford.

Current research examines how forms of collective movement and physical activity (broadly construed) build and benefit from social bonding and support among individuals. In both controlled laboratory and field settings, she explores effects – and underlying mechanisms - of joint movement on social bonding, cooperation and well-being, links between behavioural interdependence and social bonding, and performance effects of perceived social support. The work draws together fields of research across the social, behavioural, psychological and evolutionary sciences and is also relevant to a range of major public health concerns, including physical inactivity, loneliness and mental health.