Other Topics

Scheib, J.E., Cody, L.E., Clayton, N.S. & Montgomerie, R.D. (2003). Vigilance and the group-size effect: Observing behavior in humans. In B.J. Ploger & K. Yasukawa (Eds.), Teaching animal behavior in laboratory and field (pp. 90-92). New York: Academic Press. [Request]


Scheib, J.E., Cody, L.E., Clayton, N.S. & Montgomerie, R.D. (2003). Vigilance and the group-size effect: Observing behavior in humans. In B.J. Ploger & K. Yasukawa (Eds.), Exploring animal behavior in laboratory and field (pp. 259-277). New York: Academic Press. [Request]


Scheib, J.E. (2001). Review of Sex in the future: The reproductive revolution and how it will change us. Evolution and Human Behavior, 22, 217-220.


McAndrew, F.T, Akande, A., Bridgstock, R., Mealey, L, Gordon, S.C., Scheib, J.E., Akande-Adetoun, B.E., Odewale, F., Morakinyo, A., Nyahete, P. & Mubvakure, G. (2000). A multicultural study of stereotyping in English-speaking countries. Journal of Social Psychology, 140, 487-502.


Scheib, J.E. & Shaver, P.R. (1998). What it means to be female. American Journal of Primatology, 44, 277-279.


Wilson, M., Daly, M. & Scheib, J.E. (1997). Femicide: An evolutionary psychological perspective. In P.A. Gowaty (Ed.), Feminism and evolutionary biology: Boundaries, intersections and frontiers (pp. 431-465). New York: Chapman & Hall.


Scheib, J.E. (1997). Human evolution: Cognitive adaptations. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1, 4.


Scheib, J.E. (1995). Primatism? Bugs, birds, and rodents are important too. Politics & The Life Sciences, 14, 190-191.



Copyright © 2003-2006 by the Department of Psychology,
University of California, All Rights Reserved.