PTNCE Conference 2025

From The Observatory
PTNCE Conference 2025
September 22–25, 2025
University of Wrocław, Wrocław, Poland
Pricing
In-person (Member)
850 PLN
In-person (Student Member)
300 PLN
In-person (Non-member)
950 PLN
Any type (Student)
350 PLN
Category
September 2025
SMTWTFS
Week 353112134156
Week 36789101112113
Week 37141516171181192201
Week 38212212324125126127
Week 392829301223324
September 22, 2025
    Dates
    September 22–25, 2025
    Location
    University of Wrocław, Wrocław, Poland
    Pricing
    In-person (Member)
    850 PLN
    In-person (Student Member)
    300 PLN
    In-person (Non-member)
    950 PLN
    Any type (Student)
    350 PLN
    Add to a calendar

    The annual PTNCE conferences are international gatherings that bring together scientists from a wide array of disciplines, including human biology, psychology, behavioral sciences, linguistics, public health, medicine, anthropology, archaeology, demography, and primatology.

    The theme of the PTNCE conference is broad, focusing on humans from an evolutionary perspective. Our participants, guests, and speakers come from diverse scientific backgrounds, but they share a common approach: applying the evolutionary framework to study various aspects of human physiology, health, behavior, and culture.

    Agenda

    The conference program can be found here.

    Participants

    Polish Society for Human and Evolution Studies (PTNCE)
    Organizer | Homepage

    The Polish Society for Human and Evolution Studies aims at associating scientists and students of various scientific disciplines interested in the application of the evolutionary perspective in the following research areas: biology, ecology, human behavior, and culture studies.

    By creating an idiosyncratic evolutionary platform we intend to break the barriers between traditional divisions in human studies. We believe that traditional classifications of scientific fields may enhance scholarly collaboration and organization of conferences within societies and associations; however, these classifications more and more frequently do not meet the requirements of modern interdisciplinary scientific approaches.