Francys Subiaul
Francys Subiaul
Undergraduate Advisor, Associate Professor
Full-time
Contact:
Francys Subiaul is a Cognitive Scientist with a background in experimental psychology and biological anthropology. His research explores the nature and origins of social intelligence, specifically, social-cultural learning. The ability to rapidly, efficiently, and accurately copy others’ knowledge and responses underlies many of our species’ distinctive qualities including speech and writing as well as the use of complex tools. Dr. Subiaul and his colleagues seek to better understand the psychological features underlying our species' distinct imitative abilities as well as characterize its development.
Current Research
The Subiaul Social Cognition Lab focuses on understanding the development and origins of social learning including characterizing its underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms and relationship to other forms of social and asocial learning.
- Theory of Social Cognition & Communication
- Typical and Atypical Social-Cognitive Development
- Development & Evolution of Cultural Learning
- Comparative Cognition: Primates, Dogs
Subiaul, F. (2021). Assessing Social Learning in Children: Social and Executive Learning in Early Childhood Task (SELECT) Battery. George Washington University, University Facilitating Funds. [$16,510]
Subiaul, F., Park, C., Darcy-Mahoney, Core, C., Wallace, G. (2019). Automated Social Cognitive Imitation Screener for Infants with Autism. Clinical & Translational Science Institute at Children’s National Medical Center (CTSI-CN) Award #: 5UL1TRR001876 [$50,000].
Subiaul F (2007-2014). National Science Foundation. CAREER: The Evolution of Cultural Learning (BCS-0748717). [$440,861].
Rutherford MD*, Subiaul F (2016). Children with Autism have an Exceptional Explanatory Drive. Autism. Aug;20(6):744-53. doi: 10.1177/1362361315605973
Subiaul F*, Lurie H, Klein T, Holmes D, Terrace HS (2007). Cognitive Imitation in Typically-Developing 3- and 4-year Old and Individuals with Autism. Cognitive Development, 22: 230-43.
Renner, E.# *, Patterson, E.##, Subiaul, F. (2020). Specialization in the vicarious learning of novel arbitrary sequences in humans but not orangutans. Proceedings of the Royal Society, Philosophical Transactions B. DOI: 10.1098/ RSTB-2019-0442.
Subiaul F*, Cantlon, JF, Holloway, Terrace HS (2004). Cognitive Imitation in Rhesus Macaques. Science, 305(5682), 407-10.
see subiaul.com/publications for all publications and pdfs
- Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Undergraduate Advisor
- CASHP MS Co-Advisor
- Member: GW Institute for Neuroscience
- Reviewer: Various publications in the Cognitive Sciences
- Affiliated Scientist: (1) National Children’s Museum, (2) Barbara Chambers Children’s Center, (3) Center for Young Children (UMD), (4) Animal Welfare League of Arlington
- SLHS 1000: Origins of Social Intelligence
- SLHS 1000: Evolution of the Human Mind
- SLHS 1071: Foundations of Human Communication
- SLHS 3133: Autism
- ANTH/SLHS 3603: Psycholinguistics
- SLHS 6210: Research Methods in SLHS