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Johan Lind

Senior Associate Professor

Johan Lind is senior associate professor in ethology at the biology division, Linköping University, Sweden. He is also a guest at Stockholm University, Sweden, as deputy director of the Centre for Cultural Evolution. He held a post doc fellowship at St Andrews University, UK, and during autumn 2019 he was a visiting fellow at Cambridge University, UK, as a guest to the Centre for Future Intelligence. His research includes mechanisms and evolution of behavior and culture. He recently published the book "The Human Evolutionary Transition: On the differences between humans and other animals" (Enquist, Ghirlanda & Lind, Princeton University Press, 2023).

He gives external lectures on various topics related to biodiversity, animal behavior and intelligence, human behavior and cultural evolution. He is also the former chair and member of the Swedish Association for Nature Photographers (Naturfotograferna/N).

For publications, see https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=zPSDrC0AAAAJ.

Publications

2024

Johan Lind (2024) Limits of flexibility and associative learning in pigeons Learning & behavior, Vol. 52, p. 7-8 (Article in journal) Continue to DOI
Magnus Enquist, Stefano Ghirlanda, Anandi Hattiangadi, Johan Lind, Gustaf Gredeback (2024) A joint future for cultural evolution and developmental psychology Developmental Review, Vol. 73, Article 101147 (Article in journal) Continue to DOI

2023

Vera Vinken, Lena Lidfors, Jenny Loberg, Anna Lundberg, Johan Lind, Markus Jonsson, Stefano Ghirlanda, Magnus Enquist (2023) Models of conditioned reinforcement and abnormal behaviour in captive animals Behavioural Processes, Vol. 210, Article 104893 (Article in journal) Continue to DOI
Johan Lind, Vera Vinken, Markus Jonsson, Stefano Ghirlanda, Magnus Enquist (2023) A test of memory for stimulus sequences in great apes PLOS ONE, Vol. 18, Article e0290546 (Article in journal) Continue to DOI
Anna Jon-And, Markus Jonsson, Johan Lind, Stefano Ghirlanda, Magnus Enquist (2023) Sequence representation as an early step in the evolution of language PloS Computational Biology, Vol. 19, Article e1011702 (Article in journal) Continue to DOI