Why bother with animal tracking when studying host-parasite interactions?
Orr Spiegel, Tel Aviv University

Altered feeding behaviors in disease vectors
Lauren Cator, Imperial College London

Disease or drought: environmental fluctuations release zebra from anthrax transmission hotspots
Yen-Hua Huang, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Foraging with a handicap
Abdel Halloway, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

A mechanistic, stigmergy model of territory formation in solitary animals: territorial behavior can dampen disease prevalence but increase persistence
Lauren White, University of Wisconsin-Madison

The genes of attraction
Jamie Winternitz, Bielefeld University

Behavior-parasite feedbacks: how do they operate, when and why do they arise, and what are their consequences?
Dana Hawley, Virginia Tech

Passive self-isolation in vampire bats, from individuals to networks
Sebastian Stockmaier, University of Connecticut

Differential parasitism of native and invasive widow spider egg sacs
Monica Mowery, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Beaten black and blue: assessing the role of melanization in territorial encounters of the eastern fence lizard
Alison Ossip-Drahos, Marian University

Keynote: Parasites: they’re not a bug, they’re a feature
Marlene Zuk, University of Minnesota & Member, National Academy of Sciences

Host manipulation by parasites: from individual to collective behavior
Stephanie Godfrey, University of Otago

Behavioral defenses against parasitoids: genetic and neuronal mechanisms 
Todd Schlenke, University of Arizona

The behavior of infected hosts: behavioral tolerance and its implications for host competence
James Adelman, University of Memphis

TO BE ADDED:

Parasites in a social world: what we learned from primate behavior
Charlotte Defolie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen & German Primate Center

Avoidance behaviors in the face of parasitism: social parasites
Marie Charpentier, The French National Centre for Scientific Research

Insights from applying evolutionary theory of resistance to avoidance
Caroline Amoroso, University of Virginia

Modeling the ecological impact of female guppy performance on parasite prevalence 
Faith Rovenolt, University of Pittsburg

Who is your neighbor? Eavesdropping parasites and the influence of nearby signalers
Alex Trillo, Gettysburg College

Contact networks and pathogen transmission in wild animal populations
Meggan Craft, University of Minnesota

Collective behavior and parasite transmission
Nick Keiser, University of Florida

Infection avoidance behaviors
Patricia Lopes, Chapman University

Seasonal human movement and the consequences for infectious disease transmission
Amy Wesolowski, Johns Hopkins University

Behavior and parasitism in a wild baboon population
Mercy Akinyi, Institute of Primate Research, Kenya

Age-related changes in social behavior shape disease dynamics in a wild ungulate population
Greg Albery, Georgetown University

Links between social co-association and similarity of leukocyte profiles in re-wilded laboratory mice
Alexander Downie, Princeton University

Physiological costs of glucocorticoid responses in unpredictable environments
Sarah Guindre-Parker, Kennesaw State University