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Academic
and Research Staff

people
| academic and research
staff
|
support staff |
PhD students
Dr
Andrew Clark
Research Assistant (ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow)
telephone:
+44 (0)117 95 46847 email: A.P.Clark@bris.ac.uk
Room
5D27a
Webpage
Research
interests

ACADEMIC HISTORY (and related work experience)

2000
- 2005
PhD
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science
McMaster University
Research: Evolutionary Psychology
Supervisors: Martin Daly & Margo Wilson
1999 - 2000
Research Assistant
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science
University of Toronto
Employer: Scott MacDougall-Shackleton
Summer 1999
Research Assistant
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science
University of Toronto
Employer: Darryl Gwynne
1995 - 1999
Honours BSc (graduated with high distinction)
Animal Behaviour
Departments of Biology and Psychology, Faculty of Science
University of Toronto
Undergraduate thesis: "Female mate choice in black-horned
tree crickets (Oecanthus nigricornis): discrimination between
mates based on gift size"
Undergraduate supervisor: Darryl Gwynne (with special thanks
to Luc Bussiere)
Publications

Published
Clark, A.P., & Daly, M. (2005). What is the significance
of cross-national variability in sociosexuality? A response
to target article, "Sociosexuality from Argentina to
Zimbabwe: A 48-Nation Study of Sex, Culture, and Strategies
of Human Mating" by David Schmitt. Behavioral and Brain
Sciences, 28, 247-311.
Bussiere, L.F., Clark, A.P., & Gwynne,
D.T. (2005). Precopulatory choice for cues of material benefits
in tree crickets. Behavioral Ecology, 16, 255-259.
Sakaluk, S.K., Campbell, M.T.H., Clark, A.P.,
Johnson, J.C., & Keorpes, P. (2004). Male haemolymph loss
during nuptial feeding as a proximate mechanism underlying
the virgin-male mating advantage in sagebrush crickets. Behavioral
Ecology, 15, 845-849.
Clark, A.P. (2004). Self-perceived attractiveness
and masculinization predict women's sociosexuality. Evolution
and Human Behavior, 25, 113-124.
MacDougall-Shackleton, S.A., Sherry, D.F.,
Clark, A.P., Pinkus, R., & Hernandez, A.M. (2003). Photoperiodic
regulation of food-storing and hippocampus volume in black-capped
chickadees (Poecile atricapilla). Animal Behaviour, 65, 805-812.
MacDougall-Shackleton, S.A., Hernandez, A.M.,
Valyear, K.F., & Clark A.P. (2003). Photostimulation induces
rapid growth of song-control brain regions in male and female
chickadees (Poecile atricapilla). Neuroscience Letters, 340,
165-168.
In press or in preparation
Clark, A.P. (submitted). Attracting interest: Displays of
proceptivity increase the attractiveness of men and women.
Mishra, S., Clark, A.P., Daly, M. (submitted).
One woman's behaviour affects the attractiveness of others.
Clark, A.P. (in press). Are the correlates
of sociosexuality different for men and women? Personality
and Individual Differences.
Presentations
Clark, A.P."Predictors of sociosexual variation in women."
Oral presentation at the McMaster Psychology In-House Conference,
McMaster University,, June 2005.
Clark, A.P."Cues of receptivity influence
judgements of attractiveness." Oral presentation at the
Human Behaviour and Evolution Society Conference, Austin,
Texas, June 2005.
Clark, A.P."Cues of receptivity influence
judgements of attractiveness." Oral presentation at Darwin
Day, Queen's University, Kingston, April 2005.
Clark, A.P."Cues of receptivity influence
judgements of attractiveness." Cognition and Perception
Seminar at McMaster University, February 2005.
Clark, A.P."Cues of receptivity influence
judgements of attractiveness." Oral presentation at the
Human Behaviour and Evolution Society Conference, Free University,
Berlin, July 2004.
Clark, A.P."Haemolymph loss as a mating
cost for male sagebrush crickets." Oral presentation
at the Animal Behavior Society Conference, Oaxaca, Mexico,
June 2004.
Clark, A.P."Haemolymph loss as a mating
cost for male sagebrush crickets." Oral presentation
at the McMaster Psychology In-House Conference, McMaster University,
June 2004.
Clark, A.P."Haemolymph loss as a mating
cost for male sagebrush crickets." Oral presentation
at the Ontario Ecology and Ethology Colloquium, May 2004.
Clark, A.P."Masculinization and self-perceived
attractiveness predict promiscuity in women." Oral presentation
at the Human Behaviour and Evolution Society Conference, University
of Nebraska-Lincoln, June 2003.
Clark, A.P. "Mating strategy is affected
by self-perception of attractiveness in women." Poster
presented at the Human Behaviour and Evolution Society Conference,
Rutgers University, June 2002.
Clark, A.P. "Female mate choice in black-horned
tree crickets (Oecanthus nigricornis): discrimination between
mates based on gift size." Undergraduate Honours Thesis
Presentations, University of Toronto at Mississauga, April
1999.

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