29th Annual Animal Behavior Conference

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29th Annual Animal Behavior Conference
29th Annual Animal Behavior Conference
                                        25th – 26th March 2022
                          Indiana University Bloomington

              Plenary Speaker                                               Keynote Speaker
“‘The medicine of life’: social life and survival in wild   “Current and potential findings on species diversity in the
                      primates”                                genetic and neuroendocrine regulation of sexually
                                                                   dimorphic communication in electric fish”

                Dr. Susan C. Alberts                                             Dr. Troy Smith
         Distinguished Professor of Biology                              Associate Professor of Biology
                  Duke University                                             Indiana University
29th Annual Animal Behavior Conference
PROGRAM CONTENTS

PROGRAM IN BRIEF .................................................................................................... 2

WI-FI ACCESS AND CONVENTION CENTER ACCOMMODATIONS ............................... 3

INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS ............................................................................... 3

MAPS
        Bloomington ..................................................................................................... 4
        Includes bus routes, restaurant locations, and parking information
        Monroe Convention Center .............................................................................. 6
        Includes convention center parking information

PROGRAM SCHEDULE
    Friday talks ........................................................................................................ 8
    Saturday talks.................................................................................................. 11
    Poster presentations....................................................................................... 14

BIOGRAPHIES
     Plenary and Keynote speakers ........................................................................ 19

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................ 20

Please see the conference website for abstracts of all talks and poster presentations:
https://animalbehavior.indiana.edu/news-events/conference/schedule.html

                       To protect our community, you will be required to wear a mask while
                       attending this event.

                      We also kindly ask that you recycle your lanyards and badge holders at the
                      end of the conference in the designated basket.

                                                             1
PROGRAM IN BRIEF
FRIDAY, MARCH 25TH

TALKS
        10:30 AM – 5:00 PM
        Duke Energy Room West, Monroe Convention Center

POSTER SESSION
     7:00 – 9:00 PM
     Cook and Zebendon Rooms, Monroe Convention Center

SATURDAY, MARCH 26TH

TALKS
        10:45 AM – 5:15 PM
        Duke Energy Room West, Monroe Convention Center

CAREER PANEL
     1:00 PM – 2:00 PM
     Duke Energy Room West, Monroe Convention Center

CLOSING RECEPTION
     5:15 PM – 6:45 PM
     1st Floor Lobby, Monroe Convention Center

                                  HOW TO DONATE TO CISAB
   Registration for the IU Animal Behavior Conference is free. However, funding for the
   meeting depends on contributions from generous donors. Please consider donating to
   CISAB’s Foundation account to help support this and future meetings.
   Suggested Donation: Students - $10; Faculty - $30
   Donate at www.myiu.org/one-time-gift
   Type ‘ANIMAL’ in the Search Box to find “Program in Animal Behavior”

*This is a public event where pictures will be taken, and you may be photographed during the conference.

                                                        2
WI-FI ACCESS

MONROE CONVENTION CENTER:             Wi-Fi network: MCCC Guest WiFi
                                      No password is required
                                      For assistance, see Convention Center staff or call 812-336-3681

INDIANA UNIVERSITY CAMPUS:            Wi-Fi network: attwifi
                                      No password is required, but you may need to restart your browser
                                      For assistance, contact the IMU front desk at 812-856-6381

ACCOMMODATIONS FOR NURSING MOTHERS

At the Convention Center, nursing mothers will be provided with a private office, electricity, and a
refrigerator, if needed. Please see Convention Center staff at the front desk or call 812-336-3681.

INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS

INSTRUCTIONS FOR UPLOADING TALKS REMOTELY:
Submit your presentation no later than 48 hours before your presentation time.
Name your presentation file as follows:
PresentationDay_PresentationTime_LastName_FirstName_OperatingSystem.FileExtension.
For example: Fri_1100AM_Doe_John_Mac.pptx
Audio and video can be included in the PowerPoint presentations.
Additionally, any supplementary audio or video files can be submitted in a zipped file. Use the file name
above and add “_Suppl” to the end of the file name. For example: Fri_1100AM_Doe_John_Mac_Suppl.zip
After you have named your file(s) appropriately, email them to: millsml@iu.edu
You will receive a confirmation message indicating that your files have been received.
To make updates to a submitted presentation, repeat this process with the same filename. We will use
the most recent version of the file.

DAY OF PRESENTATION:
Please report to the speaker ready table 10 minutes before your talk to be fit with a microphone. This
table will be located in the back of the presentation hall.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR POSTER SET-UP:
Posters can be set up in the Cook and Zebendon Rooms any time after 1:00 PM on Friday, March 25th. You
will receive your poster number, instructions for where to hang your poster, and hanging materials upon
arrival.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR POSTER TAKE-DOWN:
We kindly ask that you take your poster with you after the poster session ends on Friday, March 25th.

                                                     3
BLOOMINGTON AND IU CAMPUS MAP

              4
Shaded area does not operate on Saturdays; neither route operates on Sundays
BUS SCHEDULES                                               List of all Bloomington routes: www.BloomingtonTransit.com
                                                                                    Bus fare for non-IU students is $1.00

                          ROUTE 1 NORTH FEE LANE / BHS NORTH

 Leave 3rd & Walnut (A)         10th & Fee (B)               10th & Fee (B)          Arrive at 3rd & Walnut (A)
            -                          -                          6:51                           7:02
          7:10                       7:15                         7:51                           8:02
          8:10                       8:15                         8:51                           9:02
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         10:10                      10:15                        10:51                          11:02
         11:10                      11:15                        11:51                          12:02
         12:10                      12:15                        12:51                           1:02
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          9:10                       9:15                         9:51                          10:02
         10:10                      10:15                        10:51                          11:02
         11:10                      11:15                           -                              -

                          ROUTE 4 HIGH STREET / SHERWOOD OAKS

 Leave 3rd & Walnut (A)     Atwater & Eagleson (B)       Atwater & Eagleson (B)       Arrive at 3rd & Walnut (A)
            -                         -                          6:51                            6:59
          7:10                      7:13                         7:51                            7:59
          8:10                      8:13                         8:51                            8:59
          9:10                      9:13                         9:51                            9:59
         10:10                      10:13                        10:51                           10:59
         11:10                      11:13                        11:51                           11:59
         12:10                      12:13                        12:51                           12:59
          1:10                      1:13                         1:51                            1:59
          2:10                      2:13                         2:51                            2:59
          3:10                      3:13                         3:51                            3:59
          4:10                      4:13                         4:51                            4:59
          5:10                      5:13                         5:51                            5:59
          6:10                      6:13                         6:51                            6:59
          7:10                      7:13                         7:51                            7:59
          8:10                      8:13                         8:51                            8:59
          9:10                      9:13                         9:51                            9:59
         10:10                      10:13                        10:51                           10:59
         11:10                      11:13                          -                               -

                                                     5
MONROE CONVENTION CENTER

302 S. College Avenue                                        Phone: 812-336-3681
Bloomington, IN 47403                              www.BloomingtonConvention.com

FIRST FLOOR
                 POSTER SESSION & REFRESHMENTS

                          REGISTRATION
                             TABLE

SECOND FLOOR
                        TALKS & REFRESHMENTS

                                               6
FREE PARKING AT CONVENTION CENTER

                7
FRIDAY, MARCH 25TH
                                        SCHEDULE OF TALKS
                           DUKE ENERGY ROOM WEST, MONROE CONVENTION CENTER

Abstracts with complete author lists are available on the conference website:
https://animalbehavior.indiana.edu/news-events/conference/schedule.html

 10:30 – 10:45 Welcoming Remarks
               Cara L. Wellman, Director, Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior

 SESSION I       ANTHROPOGENIC EFFECTS ON BEHAVIOR
                 Moderator: Tyler Nighswander

 10:45 – 11:00 COPING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE DURING EARLY DEVELOPMENT: RESPONSES TO EXPERIMENTAL
               HEAT IN WILD NESTLINGS
               Mary J. Woodruff
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University
 11:00 – 11:15 EFFECTS OF CORN GROWN ON DREDGE-AMENDED SOIL ON HIPPOCAMPAL DEVELOPMENT AND
               BEHAVIOR
               Kaylyn A.S. Flanigan
               Graduate Student, Department of Psychology, Bowling Green State University
 11:15 – 11:30 LABORATORY HOUSING AFFECTS PUBERTAL ONSET, ANXIETY-LIKE BEHAVIOR, AND OBJECT
               INTERACTION IN LONG EVANS RATS
               Victoria R. Riesgo
               Graduate Student, Department of Psychology, Bowling Green State University

                                              REFRESHMENT BREAK

 SESSION II      REPRODUCTION AND MATE CHOICE
                 Moderator: Megan Freiler

 11:45 – 12:00 HAEMOSPORIDIANS CO-INFECTION AND PARASITEMIA EFFECT IN A POLYMORPHIC SPECIES:
               EFFECT ON REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES
               Zoé Delefortrie
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana State University

 12:00 – 12:15 DO DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER FEMALES CHANGE THEIR SPERM USE PATTERNS IN RESPONSE
               TO PERCEIVED CHANGES IN MALE QUALITY?
               Brooke Peckenpaugh
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University

 12:15 – 12:30 RELATIVE IMPACTS OF PRE-EXISTING AND NEW PLASMODIUM INFECTIONS ON MALE SONGBIRD
               REPRODUCTIVE CAPACITY

                                                         8
Katherine M. Talbott
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University
 12:30 – 12:45 EFFECT OF CESAREAN SECTION ON MICROGLIA AND THE GUT MICROBIOME IN SIBERIAN
               HAMSTER OFFSPRING
               Elizabeth A. Morrison
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University

                                                 LUNCH BREAK

 SESSION III     SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
                 Moderator: Mackenzie Mills

 2:45 – 3:00     DETERMINING THE FUNCTIONAL ROLE OF DIFFERENT ELEMENTS OF COLOR IN PARENT-
                 OFFSPRING INTERACTIONS IN HOUSE SPARROW NESTS
                 Shana E Border
                 Graduate Student, School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University
 3:00 – 3:15     THE HONESTY OF BEGGING IN A PARTIAL BEGGING SYSTEM
                 Olivia L. Brooks
                 Graduate Student, School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University
 3:15 – 3:30     COOPERATION AMONG COLONY MEMBERS ROLE OF INDIVIDUALS WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF
                 FORAGING IN THE NAKED MOLE-RAT
                 Alexander G. Pergams
                 Graduate Student, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago
 3:30 – 3:45     DOES INCURRING A COST INFLUENCE HELPING BEHAVIOR IN RATS?
                 Caroline M. Driscoll
                 Graduate Student, Department of Biology, University of Louisville

                                              REFRESHMENT BREAK

 4:00 – 5:00     2022 EXEMPLAR AWARDEE AND PLENARY SPEAKER:

                 ‘THE MEDICINE OF LIFE’: SOCIAL LIFE AND SURVIVAL IN WILD PRIMATES
                 Susan C. Alberts
                 Distinguished Professor, Departments of Biology and Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University

                               POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Please reconvene this evening for our annual poster session.

7:00 – 9:00 PM
                                                       9
Cook and Zebendon Rooms, Monroe Convention Center
Hors d’oeuvres will be served in the adjacent Ralph Rogers Room

See pages 14-18 for list of posters.
Poster abstracts are available on the conference website:
https://animalbehavior.indiana.edu/news-events/conference/schedule.html

                               SATURDAY, MARCH 26TH
                                    SCHEDULE OF TALKS
                        DUKE ENERGY ROOM WEST, MONROE CONVENTION CENTER

                                                  10
Abstracts with complete author lists are available on the conference website:
https://animalbehavior.indiana.edu/news-events/conference/schedule.html

 SESSION IV      PHYSIOLOGY OF BEHAVIOR
                 Moderator: Katie Talbott

 10:45 – 11:00 LINKING THE TELOMERE REGULATOR POT1 WITH PHENOTYPIC VARIATION WITHIN AND AMONG
               POPULATIONS
               Sarah E. Wolf
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University
 11:00 – 11:15 SEX-SPECIFIC REGULATION OF STEROIDOGENIC ENZYMES AND SEASONAL AGGRESSION IN
               SIBERIAN HAMSTERS
               Kathleen M. Munley
               Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University
 11:15 – 11:30 BEHAVIORAL SEX DIFFERENCES CAUSED BY DISTINCT VASOPRESSIN SOURCES
               Nicole Rigney
               Graduate Student, Neuroscience Institute, Georgia State University

                                               REFRESHMENT BREAK

 SESSION V       FORAGING AND NAVIGATION
                 Moderator: Michelle Benavidez

 11:45 – 12:00 SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I GO? OPTIMAL FORAGING BEHAVIOR OR SERIAL PATTERN
               LEARNING?
               Thomas R. Zentall
               Faculty, Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky
 12:00 – 12:15 BY LAND OR BY SEA? ORIENTATION AND NAVIGATION BY RIPARIAN LONG-JAWED ORB WEAVERS
               (TETRAGNETHA ELONGATA) WHEN DISPLACED ONTO WATER
               Brian G. Gall
               Faculty, Department of Biology, Hanover College
 12:15 – 12:30 GENOME WIDE ASSOCIATION STUDY OF SUGAR-BASED COMPENSATORY FEEDING IN
                 DROSOPHILA
                 Mubaraq Opoola
                 Graduate Student, Department of Biology, University of Louisville

                                                LUNCH BREAK AND

                                           CAREER PANEL: 1:00-2:00 PM

              Dr. Lauren Rudolph, Assistant Professor of Biology and Neuroscience, Allegheny College
               Dr. Daniel Schwab, Science and Technology Policy Advisor, U.S. Department of Energy
 Cat Steinbeiser, M.S., Research Data Analyst, Biostatistics and Quantitative Ecology, California Department of Fish
                                                    and Wildlife

                                                         11
SESSION VI    DEVELOPMENTAL AND BEHAVIORAL PLASTICITY
              Moderator: Kathleen Munley

2:30 – 2:45   EFFECTS OF AGE ON THE SPATIAL ORGANIZATION OF OPEN FIELD BEHAVIOR IN FEMALE RATS
              Ericka Schaeffer
              Graduate Student, Psychology Department, Northern Illinois University

2:45 – 3:00   ABSENCE OF ANTI-PARASITIC REFERENTIAL ALARM CALLS IN THE GALAPAGOS YELLOW WARBLER
              POPULATION ALLOPATRIC FROM OBLIGATE BROOD PARASITES
              Facundo Fernandez-Duque
              Graduate Student, Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, University of Illinois
              Urbana-Champaign

3:00 – 3:15   CARRYOVER EFFECTS IN FIELD-CAUGHT POLYPHENIC SPADEFOOT TOADS
              Dante J. Nesta
              Graduate Student, Department of Biology, Indiana University

3:15 – 3:30   PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY IN RESPONSE TO CONSPECIFIC CUES IN POISON FROG TADPOLES
              Lisa Surber
              Graduate Student, Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Behavior, University of Illinois Urbana
              Champaign

                                           REFRESHMENT BREAK

3:45 – 4:45   KEYNOTE SEMINAR:

              CURRENT AND POTENTIAL FINDINGS ON SPECIES DIVERSITY IN THE GENETIC AND
              NEUROENDOCRINE REGULATION OF SEXUALLY DIMORPHIC COMMUNICATION IN ELECTRIC FISH
              G. Troy Smith
              Associate Professor, Department of Biology, Indiana University

4:45 – 5:10   AWARD PRESENTATIONS
              Undergraduate Poster Award
              Hanna Kolodziejski Fellowship
              William J. Rowland Mentoring Award
              Goodson Prize for Art in Science

5:10 – 5:15   Closing Remarks
              Cara L. Wellman, Director, Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior

                                                     12
CLOSING RECEPTION

Please join us this evening for a reception at the Convention Center.
5:15-6:45 PM
1st Floor Lobby, Monroe Convention Center

                                                    13
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
            FRIDAY, MARCH 25TH, COOK AND ZEBENDON ROOMS, MONROE CONVENTION CENTER

Organized alphabetically by first author last name. Numbers indicate poster numbers.
Most posters will remain available for viewing until 12:00 PM on Saturday, March 26th.
Abstracts are available on the conference website.

 1   RELIABILITY OF SPONTANEOUS PAIN BEHAVIOR           Adamczyk N1, Eaton V2, Vroman R1,3, Li J1, Malfait A1,
     ASSAYS IN AN ACUTE INFLAMMATORY PAIN MODEL         King T2, Miller RE1
                                                        1
                                                         Department of Internal Medicine, Division of
                                                        Rheumatology, Rush University Medical Center;
                                                        2
                                                         Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of
                                                        Osteopathic Medicine, and Center for Excellence in
                                                        the Neurosciences, University of New England;
                                                        3
                                                         Center for Medical Genetics, Ghent University

 2   DOES MIXED-SPECIES FLOCK SIZE AND                  Adams C1, Freeberg T1, Papes M2
                                                        1
     COMPOSITION INFLUENCE FORAGING AND CALLING          Department of Psychology and 2Department of
     UNDER RISKY CONTEXTS?                              Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of
                                                        Tennessee-Knoxville

 3   THE SCENT OF A FEMALE: FEMALE OLFACTORY            Barksdale O1, Dzaringa B1, Mills M1, Hurley LM1,
     CUES MODULATE ABR AMPLITUDES IN MALE MICE          Ronald K1,2
                                                        1
                                                         Department of Biology, Indiana University;
                                                        2
                                                         Department of Biology, Hope College

 4   LONELY AND LISTENING: HOW SEX AND SOCIAL           Brunner LR, Hurley LM
     ISOLATION INFLUENCE SOCIALITY DURING SQUEAK        Department of Biology, Indiana University
     PLAYBACK

 5   SEX DIFFERENCES IN RESPONSE TO DRUGS OF            Bryant E, Klausnitzer T, White W, White IM
     ABUSE IN ADOLESCENT RATS                           Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology,
                                                        Morehead State University

 6   A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF METHODOLOGIES TO            Chamberlain ML, Hauber ME
     STUDYING BEHAVIORAL IMPRINTING                     Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Behavior,
                                                        University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 7   SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED PARASITES AND                 Chan S, Nagisetty S, Webster A, Benoit J, Polak M
     POSTCOPULATORY SEXUAL SELECTION IN THE             Department of Biological Sciences, University of
     DROSOPHILA-GAMASODES SYSTEM                        Cincinnati

                                                   14
8    EXPRESSION OF STEROID-RELATED GENES IN         Deckard ML, Freiler MK, Proffitt MR, Smith GT
     SENSORY BRAIN REGIONS OF TWO SPECIES OF        Department of Biology, Indiana University
     APTERONOTIDS THAT DIFFER IN SEXUAL
     DIMORPHISM

9    CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF A CRUSTACEAN KIND:         DiBiasio SL, Mann MR, Mann EM, and Gall BG
     PREDATOR-PREY RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STREAM      Department of Biology, Hanover College
     CRAYFISH AND LARVAL SALAMANDERS

10   NEUROGENOMIC PROFILES OF REPRODUCTIVE          Ehrie A1,2, Lipshutz SE3, Rosvall KA1,2
                                                    1
     BEHAVIOR IN NORTHERN JACANAS                    Department of Biology and 2Center for the
                                                    Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana
                                                    University; 3Department of Biology, Loyola University
                                                    Chicago

11   SHIFTING SANDS: AN ASSESSMENT OF LANDMARK      Eigel NA, Goedecker SJ, Gall BG
     LEARNING POTENTIAL IN AQUATIC RUSTY CRAYFISH   Department of Biology, Hanover College

12   AMBASSADOR SLOTH: IS "GOOD FOR THE SPECIES"    Fowler A1, Burns-Cusato M2
                                                    1
     ALSO GOOD FOR THE INDIVIDUAL?                   Department of Biology and 2Department of
                                                    Psychology, Centre College

13   EFFECTS OF PREDATORY BURROWING CRAYFISH        Goedeker SJ, Watts JN, Eigel NA, Gall BG
     (CAMBARUS DIOGENES) ON EMBRYONIC               Department of Biology, Hanover College
     DEVELOPMENT AND LEARNING IN CHORUS FROGS
     (PSEUDACRIS TRISERIATA)

14   EFFECTS OF MATERNAL MICROBIOME                 Gohmann LD1, Demas GE1,2,3, Wellman CL2,3,4, Cusick
     MANIPULATION AND STRESS ON PREFRONTAL          JA5
                                                    1
     CORTEX IN ADULT OFFSPRING IN SIBERIAN           Department of Biology, 2Center for the Integrative
     HAMSTERS (PHODOPUS SUNGORUS)                   Study of Animal Behavior, 3Program in Neuroscience,
                                                    and 4Department of Psychological and Brain
                                                    Sciences, Indiana University; 5Department of Biology,
                                                    Utah Valley University

15   INCREASING SEROTONIN SYSTEMICALLY AND IN THE   Haraway O1, Noveer S1, Hood H1,2, Hurley L2
                                                    1
     AUDITORY MIDBRAIN OF MALE MICE IMPACTS           Department of Biology, Butler University;
                                                    2
     BASELINE VOCAL BEHAVIORS BUT NOT RESPONSE       Department of Biology, Indiana University
     TO REJECTION VOCALIZATION PLAYBACKS

16   FUNCTION OF CHIRPING DURING SOCIAL             Huynh VL1,3, Freiler MK2,3, Smith GT2,3
                                                    1
     INTERACTIONS IN STERNARCHORHYNCHUS SPP.         Department of Animal and Veterinary Science,
                                                    California State Polytechnic University-Pomona;
                                                    2
                                                     Department of Biology and 3Center for the

                                               15
Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana
                                                       University

17   THE EFFECTS OF UNFAMILIAR MAKE ODOR DURING        Jimenez G, Brunner L, Hurley L
     SQUEAK PLAYBACK ON MALE MOUSE                     Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative
     VOCALIZATIONS BASED ON DOMINANT AND               Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University
     SUBORDINATE STATUS

18   SOCIALLY LEARNED ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSES IN        Karasch B, Ward J
     EMBRYONIC MINNOWS                                 Department of Biology, Ball State University

19   HOW AND WHY FEMALE AGGRESSION VARIES              Kaur J, Aguilar EA, Rosvall KA
     WITHIN AND AMONG CONTEXTS: A LIFE HISTORY         Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative
     PERSPECTIVE IN THE TREE SWALLOW (TACHYCINETA      Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University
     BICOLOR)

20   USING REFERENTIAL ALARM CALLS TO INVESTIGATE      Kelly KV1, Branch EC1, Hauber ME2, Gill SA1
                                                       1
     MENTAL TIME TRAVEL IN FREE-LIVING SONGBIRDS        Department of Biological Sciences, Western
                                                       Michigan University; 2Department of Evolution,
                                                       Ecology, and Behavior, University of Illinois at
                                                       Urbana-Champaign

21   TIME-ACTIVITY BUDGET OF THE COMMON LOON           Kirsch AM, Gonzalez SA
     GAVIA IMMER DURING SUMMER                         School of Environment and Sustainability, University
                                                       of Michigan Ann-Arbor

22   RATS’ RELIANCE ON EPISODIC MEMORY AND             Lanier KE1, Crystal JD2,3, Panoz-Brown D2,3, Sheridan
     FAMILIARITY                                       C2,3
                                                       1
                                                        Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior,
                                                       2
                                                        Program in Neuroscience, and 3Department of
                                                       Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University

23   FRAMING EFFECTS IN PIGEONS' PREFERENCE FOR        Mueller P1, Clayton W2, Peng D1, Zentall T1
                                                       1
     RISKY OR SAFE ALTERNATIVES                         Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky;
                                                       2
                                                        Department of Psychology, McDaniel College

24   SEX DIFFERENCES IN PROGRESSIVE RATIO CHOICE       Muscott SM, Beckemeyer E, Akinbo O, Dyba E,
     TASK IN RATS: FEMALE RATS SHOW SENSITIVITY TO     Errante E, Matuszewich L
     DOPAMINERGIC AND GLUTAMATERGIC DRUGS              Department of Psychology, Northern Illinois
                                                       University

25   ADULT RHESUS MONKEYS DO NOT COPY THE              Nasrini J, Hampton RR
     CHOICES OF A CONSPECIFIC SHOWN IN VIDEOS          Department of Psychology and Yerkes National
                                                       Primate Research Center, Emory University

                                                  16
26   REVERSE CONTINGENCY AND PERCEIVED LOSS IN        Peng D, Zentall T, Sturgill J, Bergeron C, Ransdell T,
     PIGEONS                                          Colvin T, Joshi G
                                                      Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky

27   THE BITE FORCE AWAKENS: SEXUAL DIMORPHISM        Pressler J1, Stuart S1, Woodward P1, Rivera J2,
     IN HEAD MORPHOLOGY AND BITE FORCE IN             Martins E2, Ossip-Drahos A1
                                                      1
     SCELOPORUS LIZARDS                                Department of Biology, Marian University; 2School
                                                      of Life Sciences, Arizona State University

28   CARRY-OVER EFFECTS AND REPRODUCTIVE              Reed S1, Jahn A2, Ketterson E1,2
                                                      1
     READINESS IN A COMMON MIGRATORY SONGBIRD          Department of Biology and 2Environmental
                                                      Resilience Institute, Indiana University

29   THE EFFECT OF A SEROTONIN-MODULATING DRUG        Renahan M, Freiler MK, Smith GT
     ON SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND AGGRESSION IN A           Department of Biology, Indiana University
     SPECIES OF WEAKLY ELECTRIC FISH

30   IMPACTS OF TESTOSTERONE AND                      Ross KV, Talbott KM, Wolf SE, Ketterson ED
     HAEMOSPORIDIAN PARASITES ON SONG SPARROW         Department of Biology, Indiana University
     SPERM TELOMERE LENGTH

31   EFFECTS OF FOOD AVAILABILITY AND IMMUNE          Ross M, Stephens M, Huynh M, Pushman C,
     ACTIVATION ON REPRODUCTION IN HOUSE              Ramnath S, Kamat S, Murphy M
     CRICKETS (ACHETA DOMESTICUS)                     Department of Biology, Indiana University

32   DOES IMMUNE PRIMING OCCUR THROUGH                Sperka K1, Bond S2,4, Coop A3, Jackson K4, Murphy M4
                                                      1
     MATING IN ACHETA DOMESTICUS?                      Program in Animal Behavior, 2Program in
                                                      Neuroscience, 3Human Biology Program and
                                                      Department of Gender Studies, and 4Department of
                                                      Biology, Indiana University

33   SEASONAL PLASTICITY IN NEURAL STEROID            Szwed SM, Munley KM, Sinkiewicz DM, Demas GE
     SENSITIVITY AND TERRITORIAL AGGRESSION IN        Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative
     SIBERIAN HAMSTERS                                Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University

34   OXYGEN REDUCES APOPTOSIS IN RETINAL CELLS        Torrens J1, Hetzer S2, Evanson N1
                                                      1
     FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC OPTIC NEUROPATHY BUT          Pediatric Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation,
     DOES NOT REVERSE IMPAIRED OPTOKINETIC            Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center;
                                                      2
     RESPONSES                                         Neuroscience Graduate Program and 3Department
                                                      of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati

35   HEAT-INDUCED THERMOREGULATORY BEHAVIORS          Tsueda SN, Woodruff MJ, Rosvall KA
     OF FREE-LIVING TREE SWALLOW (TACHYCINETA         Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative
     BICOLOR) NESTLINGS                               Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University

                                                 17
36   DOSE-RESPONSE OF CLOMIPRAMINE ON ZEBRAFISH       Umbarger A, Matthews R, Andrade MG, Petrunich-
     (DANIO RERIO) BEHAVIOR                           Rutherford ML
                                                      Department of Psychology, Indiana University
                                                      Northwest

37   CAN FLATWORMS LEARN? AN ASSESSMENT OF            Waldridge O, Gall BG, Watterson K
     MULTIPLE LEARNING MODALITIES IN FLATWORMS        Department of Biology, Hanover College
     (PHYLUM: PLATYHELMINTHES; DUGESIA TIGRINA)

38   LARVAL DEVELOPMENT COSTS OF ADULT                Webster A, Bose J, Benoit JB, Polak M
     BEHAVIORAL RESISTANCE AGAINST ECTOPARASITIC      Department of Biological Sciences, University of
     MITES                                            Cincinnati

39   THE BOYS IN BLUE: INFORMATION CONTENT OF         Woodward P1, Pressler J1, Stuart S1, Rivera J3,
     COLOR SIGNALS IN THE EASTERN FENCE LIZARD        Martins E3, Ossip-Drahos A2
                                                      1
                                                       Department of Biology and 2Department of
                                                      Chemistry and Physical Sciences, Marian University;
                                                      3
                                                       School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University

                                                 18
PLENARY AND KEYNOTE SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES

PLENARY SPEAKER
SUSAN C. ALBERTS, Ph.D.
DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR, DUKE UNIVERSITY

                   Dr. Susan Alberts is the Robert F. Durden Distinguished Professor of
                   Biology and Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University. She
                   received her PhD from the University of Chicago in 1992. She went
                   on to complete her postdoctoral work as an NIH NRSA fellow at the
                   University of Chicago, a Junior Fellow at Harvard, and a Bunting
                   Fellow at Radcliffe College. Dr. Alberts has been investigating the
                   evolution of social behavior in the famous Amboseli baboon
                   population in Kenya for over 30 years. Her lab’s work has contributed
                   greatly to our understanding of the life history, social hierarchies,
                   and behavioral endocrinology of mammals. She is an elected fellow
                   of the Animal Behavior Society and AAAS and was elected to the
                   National Academy of Sciences in 2019.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER
G. TROY SMITH, Ph.D.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, INDIANA UNIVERSITY - BLOOMINGTON

                    Dr. Troy Smith completed his PhD at the University of Washington in
                    1996, where he studied the hormonal control of seasonal plasticity in
                    the songbird brain. He spent his postdoctoral training investigating the
                    physiology of sexually dimorphic communication in weakly electric fish
                    at the University of Texas – Austin. Dr. Smith started his own lab here
                    at Indiana University in 2002. His research is broadly focused on the
                    evolution and neuroendocrine regulation of species and sex
                    differences in electrocommunication signals. His group’s recent work
                    has been exploring how variation in gene expression in sensorimotor
                    pathways is related to variation in sexually dimorphic behavior. He has
                    also served as a former Director of CISAB.

                                    19
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  CISAB ADMINISTRATION

      Center Director: Dr. Cara L. Wellman
      Administrative Assistant: Linda Summers
      Laboratory Director: David Sinkiewicz
      Office Assistant: Charli Taylor

  CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS

   Program Committee                       Hospitality Committee         Session Moderators
   Megan Freiler (Chair)                   Kathleen Munley               Tyler Nighswander
   Katie Talbott                           Amanda Han                    Megan Freiler
   Sarah Wolf                              Tyler Nighswander             Mackenzie Mills
   Kathleen Munley                                                       Katie Talbott
   Jess Dong                                                             Michelle Benavidez
   Elizbeth Coggeshall                     Poster Session Committee      Kathleen Munley
                                           Mary Woodruff (Chair)
   Promotions Committee                    Sarah Wolf                    Registration Table Staff
   Mackenzie Mills (Chair)                 Elizabeth Morrison            Charli Taylor (Chair)
   Michelle Benavidez                      Susan Reed                    Linda Summers
   Mary Woodruff                           Megan Freiler
   Chari Taylor                            Undergraduate Volunteers      Social Media Coordinators
                                                                         Liz Aguilar (Chair)
   Audio Visual Committee                  Undergraduate Poster Judges   Kathleen Munley
   Mackenzie Mills                         Mary Woodruff
   Liz Aguilar                             Jess Dong                     Program Cover Artist
   Sarah Wolf                              Tyler Nighswander             Michelle Benavidez
   Tyler Nighswander                       Susan Reed

FUNDING SOURCES

  Indiana University Office of the Bicentennial
  Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences
  The Hanna Kolodziejski Fellowship Fund
  The William J. Rowland Mentorship Award Fund
  Indiana University Department of Biology
  Indiana University Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences

                                                       20
Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior

            Indiana University Bloomington

               409 North Park Avenue
               Bloomington, IN 47405

                 (812) 855 – 9663
                CISAB@indiana.edu
             animalbehavior.indiana.edu/
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