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, Dept. of Psychology

ALYSSA M. ARRE 2 Hillhouse Avenue, New Haven CT, 06511 [email protected] • alyssaarre.com

ACADEMIC POSITIONS 2020 – present Scientific Director, Cayo Santiago Biological Field Station

EDUCATION 2021 (anticipated) Ph.D., Psychology, Yale University 2020 M.Phil, Psychology, Yale University 2019 M.S., Psychology, Yale University 2015 B.S. Evolutionary Biology & Ecology, 2015 B.A. English, University of Rochester

GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND AWARDS 2019 NSF-GRFP, Honorable Mention, National Science Foundation 2018 MacMillan Pre-Dissertation Fellowship, $5000, Yale University MacMillan Center 2018 YIBS Doctoral Pilot Award, $2000, Yale University Institute for Biospheric Studies 2018 LAIS Travel Award, $500, Yale University Council on American & Iberian Studies 2018 Conference Travel Award, $500, Yale University Graduate Student Assembly 2017 NEEP Conference Poster Award, Northeastern Evolutionary Primatology Group 2017 Lion’s Head Award, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History 2015 President’s Choice for Research in , University of Rochester 2014 REACH Internship Funding Award, $800, University of Rochester 2011 Joseph C. Wilson “Change” Scholarship, University of Rochester

PUBLICATIONS Refereed Journal Articles *undergraduates I supervised, **equal contribution

**Arre, A.M.,**Horschler, D.J. (in press). and as social play in juvenile rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Behaviour.

Arre, A.M., Stumph, E., & Santos, L.R. (2021). Macaque species with varying social tolerance show no differences in understanding what other agents perceive. Animal Cognition. [pdf]

Arre, A.M. & Santos, L.R., (2021). Mentalizing in Non-Human Primates. In K. Ochsner & M. Gilead (Eds.), The Neural Bases of Mentalizing (pp). , NY: Springer

Arre, A.M., *Clark, C.S., & Santos, L.R. (2020). Do young rhesus monkeys know

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what others see?: A comparative developmental perspective. American Journal of Primatology. [pdf]

Koopman, S.E., Arre, A.M., Piantadosi, S.T., & Cantlon, J.F. (2019). One-to-one correspondence without language. Royal Society Open Science. 6(10), 190495. [pdf]

Rosati, A.G., Arre, A.M., Platt, M.L., & Santos, L.R. (2018). Developmental shifts in social cognition: socioemotional biases across the lifespan in rhesus monkeys. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 72(163). [pdf]

Johnston, A.M., Turrin, C., Watson, L., Arre. A.M., & Santos, L.R. (2017). Uncovering the origins of dog-human eye contact: Dingoes establish eye contact more than wolves, but less than dogs. Animal Behaviour, 133: 123-129. [pdf]

Rosati, A.G., Arre, A.M., Platt, M.L., & Santos, L.R. (2016). Rhesus monkeys show human-like changes in gaze following across the lifespan. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 283: 20160376. [pdf]

ORAL PRESENTATIONS Johnston, A. M., Palermo, S., Arre, A., & Santos, L. R. (2020). Inhibitory control in dogs and dingoes. Talk presented at the East Coast Canine Cognition Workshop, New Haven, CT.

Arre, A.M. & Santos, L.R. (2019). Do primates take identity into account when gaze following?: An experiment with rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Talk presented at the 42nd Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists. Madison, WI.

Arre, A.M., Johnston, A.J., & Santos, L.R. (2018). What's in a look? Exploring the function of canid gaze. Talk presented at the East Coast Canine Cognition Workshop at Yale. New Haven, CT.

Arre, A.M. & Santos, L.R. (2018). Cayo Santiago as a long-term site for behavioral and cognitive research, and efforts to preserve it. Talk presented at the 41st Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists. San Antonio, TX.

Arre, A.M., Rosati, A.G., & Santos, L.R. (2017). Developmental changes in rhesus macaque attention to socioemotional stimuli. Talk presented at the Harvard-Yale Conference on Human Evolution, . Cambridge, MA.

Arre, A.M., Rosati, A.G., Santos, L.R. (2015). Developmental changes in primate gaze following. Talk presented at the Undergraduate Research Exposition at the University of Rochester. Rochester, NY. ☨ Awarded the President’s Choice in Research

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

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*Ross, M., Arre, A.M., & Santos, L.R. (2019). Investigating species differences in social cognition between rhesus and Barbary macaques. Poster presented at the 2019 Yale Undergraduate Research Symposium: New Haven, CT.

Arre, A.M., Rosati, A.G., *Hengartner, A.C. & Santos, L.R. (2019). Environmental instability promotes social cognitive development in infant rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Poster presented at the Cognitive Developmental Society Biennial Conference: Louisville, KY.

Johnston, A. M., Arre, A. M., Bogese, M. J., & Santos, L. R. (2019). How do communicative cues shape the way that dogs encode objects?. Poster presented at the Cognitive Developmental Society Biennial Conference: Louisville, KY. [pdf]

Arre, A.M. & Santos, L.R. (2019). Socioecology and perspective taking: insights from a comparison of two macaque species. Poster presented at the 42nd Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists. Madison, WI. [pdf]

*Hengartner, A.C., Arre, A.M., & Santos, L.R. (2019). The effects of early life stress and ecological variability on sociocognitive development in rhesus macaques. Yale University, Department of Neuroscience Senior Poster Session: New Haven, CT.

Arre, A.M. & Santos, L.R. (2018). Do young rhesus monkeys know what others see?: A comparative developmental perspective. Poster presented at the 41st Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists, San Antonio, TX. Poster presentation. [pdf]

Arre, A.M., & Santos, L.R. (2018). Do young rhesus monkeys know what others see?: A comparative developmental perspective. Poster presented at the 25th International Conference on Comparative Cognition, Melbourne Beach, FL. [pdf]

Arre, A.M., Rosati, A.G., & Santos, L.R. (2017). Developmental changes in selective attention to socioemotional stimuli in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Poster presented at the Northeastern Evolutionary Primatology Conference, New Haven, CT. [pdf] ☨ Awarded NEEP Poster Prize

Arre, A.M., & Santos, L.R., (2017). Investigating the development of visual perspective representations in rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) infants. Poster presented at the Cognitive Development Society Biennial Conference: Portland, OR. [pdf]

Koopman, S.E., Arre, A.M., Pianadosi, S., & Cantlon, J.F. (2017). Understanding the 1- to-1 correspondence principle without counting. Poster presented at the Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, Austin, TX. [pdf]

TEACHING AND MENTORING Senior Thesis Mentor

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2019 Astrid Hengartner, Yale University, Dept. of Neuroscience 2018 Kacie Saxer-Taulbee, Yale University, Dept. of Cognitive Science 2017 Alondra Arguello, Yale University, Dept. of Evolutionary Biology 2017 Chelsey Clark, Yale University, Dept. of Psychology

Head Teaching Fellow 2020 PSYC 200: Statistics, Yale University, Dept. of Psychology * with weekly independent-led sections

Teaching Fellow 2019 PSYC 179: Thinking, Yale University, Dept. of Psychology 2019 PSYC 200: Statistics, Yale University, Dept. of Psychology * with weekly independently-led sections 2018 PSYC 139: Mental Lives of Babies & Animals, Yale University, Dept. of Psychology 2014 BCS 183: Animal Minds, University of Rochester, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Science

Guest Lectures 2018 Comparative Cognitive Development, University of : Amherst 2017 Primate Behavior and Ecology, Yale University

LAB, FIELD, AND MUSEUM EXPERIENCE Work Experience 2019 – 2021 Graduate Student Assistant, Dept. of Student Programs, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, CT 2015 – 2017 Lab Manager, Comparative Cognition Lab, Yale University, CT 2013 – 2015 Undergrad Research Assistant, Concepts, Actions, and Objects Lab, University of Rochester, NY 2014 Undergrad Summer Research Assistant, Comparative Cognition Lab, Yale University, CT 2013 Butterfly Exhibit Curator, West Hartford Children’s Museum, CT

Field Sites and Research Stations 2014 – present Cayo Santiago Biological Field Station, Humacao, Puerto Rico Subject population: Macaca mulatta 2018 Trentham Monkey Forest, Stoke-On-Trent, England Subject population: Macaca sylvanus

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2018 Dingo Discovery Research Centre, Toolern Vale, Australia Subject population: Canis lupus dingo 2013 – 2015 , Rochester, New York, USA Subject population: Papio anubis

SERVICE Departmental Committees 2017 – 2019 Co-chair, Colloquium Committee, Yale University 2017 – 2019 Co-chair, Developmental Psychology Current Works, Yale University

Outreach 2015 – 2021 Science & Outreach Docent, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, CT

Ad Hoc Reviewing Developmental Science, Journal of Comparative Psychology, Scientific Reports, WIREs Cognitive Science

Editing The Human Swarm by Mark Moffett, Ph.D. (paid position)

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS American Society of Primatologists, International Primatological Society, Northeastern Evolutionary Primatologists

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