---
abstract: |-
  Within human evolution, the period of Homo Erectus is particularly interesting since in this period,
  our ancestors have carried thicker skulls than the species both before and after them. There are
  competing theories as to the reasons of this enlargement and its reversal. One of these is the theory
  that Homo Erectus males fought for females by clubbing each other on the head. The other one says
  that due to the fact that Homo Erectus’ did not cook their food at all, they had to have strong jaw
  muscles attached to ridges on either side of the skull which prohibited brain and skull growth but
  required the skull to be thick.
  The re-thinning of the skull on the other hand might be due to the fact that a thick skull provided
  poor cooling for the brain or that as hominids started using tools to cut their food and using fire to
  cook it, they did not require the strong jaw muscles anymore and this trait was actually selected
  against since the brain had a tendency to grow and the ridges and a thick skull were preventing this.
  In this paper we simulated both the fighting and the diet as ways in which the hominid skull grew
  thicker. We also added other properties such as cooperation, selfishness and vision to our agents and
  analyzed their changes over generations.
  Keywords: Evolution, Skull Thickness, Hominids, Multi-Agent Modeling, Genetic Algorithms
altloc:
  - http://students.sabanciuniv.edu/~sedavural/paper&pics.doc
chapter: ~
commentary: ~
commref: ~
confdates: ~
conference: ~
confloc: ~
contact_email: ~
creators_id: []
creators_name:
  - family: Vural
    given: Seda
    honourific: senior student
    lineage: ''
  - family: Tüzer
    given: 'Sinan, F.'
    honourific: senior student
    lineage: ''
date: 2004
date_type: published
datestamp: 2004-11-06
department: ~
dir: disk0/00/00/39/23
edit_lock_since: ~
edit_lock_until: ~
edit_lock_user: ~
editors_id: []
editors_name: []
eprint_status: archive
eprintid: 3923
fileinfo: /style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png;/3923/1/paper%26pics.pdf
full_text_status: public
importid: ~
institution: ~
isbn: ~
ispublished: inpress
issn: ~
item_issues_comment: []
item_issues_count: 0
item_issues_description: []
item_issues_id: []
item_issues_reported_by: []
item_issues_resolved_by: []
item_issues_status: []
item_issues_timestamp: []
item_issues_type: []
keywords: ~
lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:55:43
latitude: ~
longitude: ~
metadata_visibility: show
note: ~
number: ~
pagerange: ~
pubdom: FALSE
publication: ~
publisher: ~
refereed: FALSE
referencetext: ~
relation_type: []
relation_uri: []
reportno: ~
rev_number: 12
series: ~
source: ~
status_changed: 2007-09-12 16:54:18
subjects:
  - comp-sci-art-intel
succeeds: ~
suggestions: ~
sword_depositor: ~
sword_slug: ~
thesistype: ~
title: 'Multi Agent Modelling: Evolution and Skull Thickness in Hominids'
type: other
userid: 5206
volume: ~