KLI Colloquia are informal, public talks that are followed by extensive dissussions. Speakers are KLI fellows or visiting researchers who are interested in presenting their work to an interdisciplinary audience and discussing it in a wider research context. We offer three types of talks:
1. Current Research Talks. KLI fellows or visiting researchers present and discuss their most recent research with the KLI fellows and the Vienna scientific community.
2. Future Research Talks. Visiting researchers present and discuss future projects and ideas togehter with the KLI fellows and the Vienna scientific community.
3. Professional Developmental Talks. Experts about research grants and applications at the Austrian and European levels present career opportunities and strategies to late-PhD and post-doctoral researchers.
- The presentation language is English.
- If you are interested in presenting your current or future work at the KLI, please contact the Scientific Director or the Executive Manager.
Event Details

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/5881861923?omn=85945744831
Meeting ID: 588 186 1923
Topic description / abstract:
Around 3.5 million years ago (Ma), hominins began to manufacture simple stone tools, which marked the beginning of the Stone Age, that lasted until about 5,000 years ago. Most textbooks on human evolution focus heavily on the Stone Age and cognitive archeologists frequently assess the quality of stone tools at different points in time to speculate about the evolution of the brain and intelligence in human predecessors. Some scholars even analyze stone tools to theorize about which hominins experienced evolutionary “cognitive leaps,” and when. However, hominin ancestors diverged from the lineage that led to modern chimpanzees around 6.5 Ma, long before the Stone Age began. The time between 6.5 and 3.5 Ma, identified here as the Botanic Age, has received relatively little attention in studies of hominin cognitive evolution. Various lines of evidence suggest that the emergence and refinement of bipedalism during the Botanic Age sparked changes in the brain that (much) later contributed to the emergence of humanlike musical and linguistic abilities. It is also likely that hominins were inventing new kinds of tools made from vegetal matter, such as baby slings, long before they began modifying rocks into useful shapes. If so, prolonged evolution of bipedalism and a proliferation of botanical inventions were more important than previously believed for sculpting advanced cognition in our prehistoric ancestors. In sum, early hominins’ “formative years” began during the first three and a half million years of their existence rather than during the Stone Age
Biographical note:
Dean Falk is the Hale G. Smith Professor of Anthropology and a Distinguished Research Professor at Florida State University in Tallahassee, where she teaches and does research. Having trained as a biological anthropologist, Falk is interested in the evolution of the brain and the emergence of human cognitive abilities that led to language, music, analytical thinking, and warfare. She has directed collaborative research on the brains (or traces of them imprinted in fossilized skulls) of nonhuman primates, prehistoric human relatives, and recent humans including Homo floresiensis (aka “Hobbit”) and Albert Einstein. In addition to numerous scientific and popular articles, Falk has written books including Braindance: Revised and Expanded Edition (2004), Finding Our Tongues: Mothers, Infants, and the Origins of Language (2009), The Fossil Chronicles: How Two Controversial Discoveries Changed Our View of Human Evolution (2011), Geeks, Genes, and the Evolution of Asperger Syndrome (2018, coauthored with Eve Penelope Schofield), and The Botanic Age: Planting the Seeds of Human Evolution (2025). She is currently working on a collaborative volume that provides English translations of previously unpublished letters written to the Austrian pediatrician Hans Asperger before, during, and after WWII. More information may be found at: www.deanfalk.com