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Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative Biodemography is a collection of papers that examine cross-species comparisons of social environments with a focus on social behaviors along with social hierarchies and connections, to examine their effects on health, longevity, and life histories. This report covers a broad spectrum from humans to nonhuman animals, exploring a variety of measures of position in social hierarchies and social networks, and drawing links among these factors to health outcomes and trajectories. Sociality, Hierarchy, Health revisits both the theoretical underpinnings of biodemography and the empirical findings that have emerged over the past two decades.
Contents
- THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
- COMMITTEE ON ADVANCES IN BIODEMOGRAPHY: CROSS-SPECIES COMPARISONS OF SOCIAL ENVIRONMENTS, SOCIAL BEHAVIORS, AND THEIR EFFECTS ON HEALTH AND LONGEVITY: A WORKSHOP
- COMMITTEE ON POPULATION
- Acknowledgment of Reviewers
- Contributors
- 1. Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative BiodemographyMaxine Weinstein, Hillard Kaplan, and Meredith A. Lane.
- 2. Alleles, Mortality Schedules, and the Evolutionary Theory of
SenescenceKenneth W. Wachter.
- 3. Genes Revisited: The Biodemography of Social Environmental Variation
Through a Functional Genomics LensJenny Tung.
- 4. The Long Reach of History: Intergenerational and Transgenerational
Pathways to Plasticity in Human LongevityChristopher W. Kuzawa and Dan T.A. Eisenberg.
- 5. Genomic and Evolutionary Challenges for BiodemographyKenneth M. Weiss.
- EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT: NESTED GENOMIC SYMMETRIES
- THE DISSOLVING IDENTITY OF “GENES” AND THEIR FUNCTION
- STRANGE ENCOUNTERS OF THE N-DIMENSIONAL KIND
- THE HUMAN GENOME DOESN'T EXIST, AND NEITHER DOES YOURS
- SOME RELEVANT EPISTEMOLOGICAL ISSUES
- SOME STRATEGIC THOUGHTS
- CONCLUSIONS: CAN THE CAUSAL WEB BE UNWOVEN
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- 6. Evolutionary Perspectives on the Links Between Close Social Bonds,
Health, and FitnessJoan B. Silk.
- 7. Pathways of Survival and Social Structure During Human Transitions from
the Darwinian WorldCaleb Finch and Burton Singer.
- 8. Social and Economic Underpinnings of Human BiodemographyPaul L. Hooper, Michael Gurven, and Hillard Kaplan.
- 9. Work to Live and Live to Work: Productivity, Transfers, and Psychological
Well-Being in Adulthood and Old AgeJonathan Stieglitz, Adrian V. Jaeggi, Aaron D. Blackwell, Benjamin C. Trumble, Michael Gurven, and Hillard Kaplan.
- 10. Intergenerational Transfers, Social Arrangements, Life Histories, and the
ElderlyRonald Lee.
- INTRODUCTION
- SENSITIVITY AND SELECTION
- MICROSIMULATION OF THE TRANSFER MODEL WITH EXPLICIT FOOD-SHARING GROUPS AND RULES
- WHICH SOCIAL ARRANGEMENTS HAVE THE HIGHEST FITNESS
- OPTIMAL LIFE HISTORIES WITH INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS
- THE EVOLUTION OF TRANSFERS AND LONGEVITY
- THE EVOLUTION OF MENOPAUSE AND INTER-ADULT TRANSFERS
- INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS AND SEXUAL DIMORPHISM
- TIME PREFERENCE, TRANSFERS, AND THE MARGINAL VALUE OF ENERGY
- INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS AND COOPERATION
- COOPERATION AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS AS REALLOCATION SYSTEMS
- DIRECT AND INDIRECT GENETIC EFFECTS AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS
- HYPOTHESES
- EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
- 11. Stress and Metabolic DiseaseKaren K. Ryan.
- 12. Hierarchy and Connectedness as Determinants of Health and Longevity in
Social InsectsBrian Johnson and James R. Carey.
- 13. Biodemography of Ectothermic Tetrapods Provides Insights into the
Evolution and Plasticity of Mortality PatternsDavid A. W. Miller, Fredric J. Janzen, Gary M. Fellers, Patrick M. Kleeman, and Anne M. Bronikowski.
- 14. A Comparative Perspective on Reproductive Aging, Reproductive Cessation,
Post-Reproductive Life, and Social BehaviorPeter T. Ellison and Mary Ann Ottinger.
- 15. The Male-Female Health-Survival Paradox: A Comparative Perspective on Sex
Differences in Aging and MortalitySusan C. Alberts, Elizabeth A. Archie, Laurence R. Gesquiere, Jeanne Altmann, James W. Vaupel, and Kaare Christensen.
- 16. Of Baboons and Men: Social Circumstances, Biology, and the Social
Gradient in HealthMichael G. Marmot and Robert Sapolsky.
This study was supported by the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health through Contract No. 10001706, Order No. HHSN26300045. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the organizations or agencies that provided support for the project.
Suggested citation:
National Research Council. (2014). Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative Biodemography: A Collection of Papers. M. Weinstein and M.A. Lane, Editors, Committee on Population, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine.
- NLM CatalogRelated NLM Catalog Entries
- M. Weinstein and M. A. Lane, Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative Biodemography: A Collection of Papers.[Evol Med Public Health. 2016]M. Weinstein and M. A. Lane, Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative Biodemography: A Collection of Papers.Moorad J. Evol Med Public Health. 2016 Feb 28; 2016(1):67-8. Epub 2016 Feb 28.
- Who do you think they were? How family historians make sense of social position and inequality in the past.[Br J Sociol. 2012]Who do you think they were? How family historians make sense of social position and inequality in the past.Bottero W. Br J Sociol. 2012 Mar; 63(1):54-74.
- The Fragility of Individual-Based Explanations of Social Hierarchies: A Test Using Animal Pecking Orders.[PLoS One. 2016]The Fragility of Individual-Based Explanations of Social Hierarchies: A Test Using Animal Pecking Orders.Chase ID, Lindquist WB. PLoS One. 2016; 11(7):e0158900. Epub 2016 Jul 13.
- Review Primate disease ecology in comparative and theoretical perspective.[Am J Primatol. 2012]Review Primate disease ecology in comparative and theoretical perspective.Nunn CL. Am J Primatol. 2012 Jun; 74(6):497-509.
- Review Geographic patterns in the distribution of social systems in terrestrial arthropods.[Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2011]Review Geographic patterns in the distribution of social systems in terrestrial arthropods.Purcell J. Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2011 May; 86(2):475-91. Epub 2010 Sep 14.
- Sociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative BiodemographySociality, Hierarchy, Health: Comparative Biodemography
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