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Dr Nicola Koyama

School of Biological and Environmental Sciences

Faculty of Science

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I am interested in the evolution of social behaviour. My research focuses on how group-living individuals regulate their social relationships, how they manage aggressive conflict within the context of their various relationships, individuals' roles within their social networks and network changes over time. I have explored how individuals maintain their cooperative relationships through reciprocation and interchange of valuable social services. Much of my research has been carried out with non-human primates.

My research has extended to humans to include investigations of mate preferences and sexual advertisement. I am interested in the adaptive nature of human mate preferences and their plasticity and flexibility in today’s societies. This has involved projects examining the influence of feminist attitudes on traditional mate preferences and the manipulation of female clothing in response to increased mate competition.

I am co-Director of the Research Centre for Evolutionary Anthropology & Palaeoecology and am committed to translating institutional policies for diversity and inclusion into actionable strategies for cultural change. I am our Departmental Equality Diversity & Inclusion (EDI) Coordinator, a Member of the Faculty of Science EDI Panel, and the Chair of the LJMU Decolonising The Curriculum Working Group (which I initiated and established with our LJMU EDI Manager). I have been a member of our university Staff Diversity Network for over 20 years, am an LJMU LGBT+ Ally and currently co-lead the departmental Athena SWAN Submission. I am a Member of our Faculty of Science Animal Welfare & Ethical Research Group and have recently ended a term as Council Member of the Primate Society of Great Britain.

I have been lead supervisor for seven PhD students working on a broad range of topics was recently awarded "Outstanding Doctoral Supervisor". Recent PhD projects:
Ed Parker – Behavioural ecology of samango monkeys
Harriet Thatcher – Socio-ecology and anthropogenic disturbance in vervet monkeys
Isabelle Szott – Stress & coping strategies in savanna elephants
Simon Stringer – Behaviour and seed dispersal of samango monkeys
James Waterman - Intra- and inter-group relations in Sulawesi crested black macaques

Degrees

University of Liverpool, United Kingdom, PhD in Primate Behaviour
University College London, United Kingdom, BSc(Hons) Zoology

Academic appointments

Reader in Primate Behaviour, School of Biological & Environmental Sciences, LJMU, 2021 - present
Co-Director for the Research Centre in Evolutionary Anthropology & Palaeoecology, LJMU, 2020 - present
Senior Lecturer, School of Natural Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, 2004 - 2020

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