My #introduction keywords: #academic #evolution #cooperation #ecology

I'm a #postdoc specialising in evolutionary and ecological modelling at #NUS #Singapore currently working on #theoretical #models for the evolution of cooperation, in collaboration with Hisashi Ohtsuki, at #SOKENDAI, #Japan.

Previous work: estimating undetected #extinctions, #qualitativemodelling, migratory #phenology, #foodweb #modelling, local #adaptation, #carryover effects, #dispersal.

My blog nadiah.org/

@nadiah looking forward to your toots. I work in social insects , where of course the evolution of cooperation is a core topic.

@clementkent That's fantastic, I'm glad to meet you! I've been hoping I'd find lots of evolution-of-cooperation people to follow on here.

I unfortunately haven't had a chance to look deeply into insect eusociality. The furthest I got was once, a long time ago, and aborted project on termites. I wrote a blog post about what I learnt here: nadiah.org/2016/03/23/termite-

Follow

@nadiah Hope we'll talk more. Insects provide interesting evolutionary test cases, because of the multiple independent origins of lifestyles. I don't work on the theory of this, more on the consequences for .

@clementkent I remember being quite confused about the multiple possible pathways to eusociality.

@clementkent (You can see in that blog post that I'm trying hard to reconcile two possible mechanisms just for termites alone)

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.