Faculty
Aaron Rundus
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Ph.D., University of California Davis
Office Phone: 436-3151
Office Room #: PB 38
Email: arundus@wcupa.edu
Preferred means of contact:
Email
Spring 2013 Office Hours:
Mondays and Wednesdays: 1:00-3:00
Fridays: 10:00-11:00
Courses typically taught:
- PSY335 Animal Behavior
- PSY255 Introduction to Biological Psychology
Brief description of research interests:
My research program investigates the functional significance of signal structure and communicative behavior in an effort to better understand the proximate and ultimate sources of signal diversity in communication systems. Within this broad conceptual framework, I am particularly interested in the evolution and function of complex multi-modal signals, those consisting of elements of more than one signal modality.
My research examines (a) the role that the sensory specializations of signal targets play in the evolution of multi-modal signals, (b) how components of these complex signals are shaped by the environments through which they propagate (c) the impact of immediate feedback on the proximate dynamics of signaling systems and (d) and the role of signal targets as mediators of the learning experiences involved in the expression of communicative behavior in both human and non-human animals.
Representative publications:
Joshi, Sanjay S., Johnson, Ryan, Rundus, Aaron S., Clark, Rulon W., Barbour, Matthew, & Qwings,
Donald H. in press. Robotic squirrel models: Study of squirrel-rattlesnakes interaction in laboratory and
natural settings. IEEE Robotics & Automation.
Rundus, Aaron S., Sullivan-Beckers, Laura, Wilgers, Dustin J., & Hebets, Eileen A. 2011. Females are
choosier in the dark: Environment-dependent reliance on courtship components and its impact on
fitness. Evolution, 65(1), 268-282.
Hebets, EileenĀ A. & Rundus, Aaron S. 2011. Chemical Communication in a Multimodal Context. In:
Chemical Communication in Crustaceans. (Ed. by T. Breithaupt & M. Thiel), pp. 335-354. New York,
New York: Springer.
Rundus, Aaron S., Santer, Roger D., & Hebets, Eileen A. 2010. Multimodal courtship efficacy of
Schizocosa retrorsa wolf spiders: implications of an additional signal modality. Behavioral Ecology,
21(4), 701-707.
Rundus, Aaron S., Owings, Donald H., Joshi, Sanjay S., Chinn, Erin & Giannini, Nicholas. 2007. Ground
squirrels use an infrared signal to deter rattlesnake predation. Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, 104(36), 14372-14376.





