scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Rebecca Sear | Q21264547 |
Gert Stulp | Q57640760 | ||
Louise Barrett | Q95991376 | ||
P2860 | cites work | Colloquium papers: Natural selection in a contemporary human population | Q22066304 |
Fitness and its role in evolutionary genetics | Q22122004 | ||
The Biodemography of Fertility: A Review and Future Research Frontiers | Q24289493 | ||
The Statistical Crisis in Science | Q24492515 | ||
Recent acceleration of human adaptive evolution | Q24645206 | ||
The cultural evolution of fertility decline | Q26750480 | ||
The Adapting Mind in the Genomic Era | Q26766465 | ||
Understanding variation in human fertility: what can we learn from evolutionary demography? | Q28076957 | ||
Controversies in the evolutionary social sciences: a guide for the perplexed | Q28200115 | ||
Evolutionary psychology. Controversies, questions, prospects, and limitations | Q28272709 | ||
Parents face quantity-quality trade-offs between reproduction and investment in offspring in Iceland | Q28601790 | ||
The genetics of human adaptation: hard sweeps, soft sweeps, and polygenic adaptation | Q28744550 | ||
Eight thousand years of natural selection in Europe | Q30039940 | ||
Fertility in Advanced Societies: A Review of Research | Q30052557 | ||
Genomics: moving behavioural ecology beyond the phenotypic gambit | Q30410093 | ||
A curvilinear effect of height on reproductive success in human males. | Q30505235 | ||
A demographic transition altered the strength of selection for fitness and age-specific survival and fertility in a 19th century American population | Q30540421 | ||
Using an existing data set to answer new research questions: a methodological review. | Q33505406 | ||
Flexibility in reproductive timing in human females: integrating ultimate and proximate explanations | Q33784036 | ||
Darwin in mind: new opportunities for evolutionary psychology | Q33979481 | ||
Evidence of widespread selection on standing variation in Europe at height-associated SNPs | Q34294735 | ||
Parental investment and the optimization of human family size | Q34455086 | ||
Family and fertility: kin influence on the progression to a second birth in the British Household Panel Study | Q34629310 | ||
Evolutionary ecology of human reproduction | Q34892467 | ||
Advances in human reproductive ecology | Q34901025 | ||
Conducting high-value secondary dataset analysis: an introductory guide and resources | Q35113156 | ||
Demography and ecology drive variation in cooperation across human populations | Q35198071 | ||
The coevolution of human fertility and wealth inheritance strategies | Q35211983 | ||
The importance of population growth and regulation in human life history evolution | Q35241802 | ||
Industrial energy use and the human life history | Q35551391 | ||
Taking the aggravation out of data aggregation: A conceptual guide to dealing with statistical issues related to the pooling of individual-level observational data. | Q35587055 | ||
Human fertility, molecular genetics, and natural selection in modern societies. | Q35651661 | ||
Race, Ethnicity, and the Changing Context of Childbearing in the United States | Q36201634 | ||
Intralocus sexual conflict over human height | Q36396000 | ||
Education Differences in Intended and Unintended Fertility | Q36627826 | ||
Wealth, fertility and adaptive behaviour in industrial populations | Q36769923 | ||
Methodologically sound: Evaluating the psychometric approach to the assessment of human life history [reply to Copping, Campbell, and Muncer, 2014] | Q36837663 | ||
A model comparison approach shows stronger support for economic models of fertility decline | Q36855314 | ||
The Reproductive Ecology of Industrial Societies, Part II : The Association between Wealth and Fertility. | Q37410749 | ||
The marginal valuation of fertility | Q37723904 | ||
The weirdest people in the world? | Q37765324 | ||
Measuring selection in contemporary human populations | Q37777324 | ||
The effect of female height on reproductive success is negative in Western populations, but more variable in non-western populations. | Q37992845 | ||
Evolutionary psychology: new perspectives on cognition and motivation | Q38071129 | ||
Psychometrics and life history strategy: the structure and validity of the High K Strategy Scale. | Q38258471 | ||
A life history theory of father absence and menarche: a meta-analysis | Q38258479 | ||
Evolutionary perspectives on human height variation. | Q38296476 | ||
Evolutionary contributions to the study of human fertility | Q39442693 | ||
EigenGWAS: finding loci under selection through genome-wide association studies of eigenvectors in structured populations | Q39797372 | ||
Reproducing in cities | Q39833339 | ||
Human macroecology: linking pattern and process in big-picture human ecology. | Q39992054 | ||
Crowdsourced research: Many hands make tight work | Q40450920 | ||
An evolutionary ecological perspective on demographic transitions: modeling multiple currencies | Q40653783 | ||
The future of sociobiology: Counting babies or studying proximate mechanisms | Q41079551 | ||
Effects of the demographic transition on the genetic variances and covariances of human life-history traits. | Q41615450 | ||
Between nurture and nature: the shifting determinants of female fertility in Danish twin cohorts. | Q42614622 | ||
Selection bias in a population survey with registry linkage: potential effect on socioeconomic gradient in cardiovascular risk | Q43176279 | ||
The demographic transition: are we any closer to an evolutionary explanation? | Q46413698 | ||
"Economic man" in cross-cultural perspective: behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies | Q47232655 | ||
How much does family matter? Cooperative breeding and the demographic transition | Q47325145 | ||
Leadership, followership, and evolution: some lessons from the past | Q47567342 | ||
Fertility, parental investment, and the early adoption of modern contraception in rural Ethiopia. | Q47810880 | ||
Higher qualifications, first-birth timing, and further childbearing in England and Wales | Q47917714 | ||
From the grave to the cradle: evidence that mortality salience engenders a desire for offspring | Q48479435 | ||
Medicine, evolution, and natural selection: an historical overview | Q48923559 | ||
Genetic influence on age at first birth of female twins born in the UK, 1919-68. | Q50999069 | ||
Ecological variation in wealth-fertility relationships in Mongolia: the 'central theoretical problem of sociobiology' not a problem after all? | Q51106839 | ||
The importance of the timescale of the fitness metric for estimates of selection on phenotypic traits during a period of demographic change. | Q51287019 | ||
Does natural selection favour taller stature among the tallest people on earth? | Q51362824 | ||
The danger of applying the breeder's equation in observational studies of natural populations. | Q51620497 | ||
Incomplete reporting of men's fertility in the United States and Britain: a research note. | Q52909074 | ||
Low fertility increases descendant socioeconomic position but reduces long-term fitness in a modern post-industrial society. | Q55315846 | ||
Community-level education accelerates the cultural evolution of fertility decline. | Q55346909 | ||
Wealth modifies relationships between kin and women's fertility in high-income countries | Q55872328 | ||
Measuring selection in contemporary human populations | Q55932445 | ||
Niche construction, human behavior, and the adaptive-lag hypothesis | Q56430930 | ||
How Well Does Paternity Confidence Match Actual Paternity? | Q56533043 | ||
Resource Transfers and Human Life-History Evolution | Q57078619 | ||
Grandparental Effects on Fertility Vary by Lineage in the United Kingdom | Q57525626 | ||
Educational differences in timing and quantum of childbearing in Britain | Q58285939 | ||
Spatial Analysis of the Causes of Fertility Decline in Prussia | Q58286030 | ||
Social Networks, Social Influence, and Fertility in Germany | Q58286931 | ||
Attitudes, Norms and Perceived Behavioural Control: Explaining Fertility Intentions in Bulgaria | Q58289067 | ||
Synthesis in the human evolutionary behavioural sciences | Q58292538 | ||
Human behavioral ecology: current research and future prospects | Q58292590 | ||
Trade-offs in modern parenting: a longitudinal study of sibling competition for parental care | Q58299418 | ||
Unraveling the intergenerational transmission of fertility: genetic and shared-environment effects during the demographic transition in the Netherlands, 1810–1910 | Q58576324 | ||
Context effects in national health surveys: effects of preceding questions on reporting serious difficulty seeing and legal blindness | Q73790016 | ||
Evolutionary psychology: counting babies or studying information-processing mechanisms | Q73808694 | ||
Some observations on the economic framework for fertility analysis | Q82458393 | ||
What teen mothers know | Q86677601 | ||
P275 | copyright license | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International | Q20007257 |
P6216 | copyright status | copyrighted | Q50423863 |
P433 | issue | 4 | |
P6104 | maintained by WikiProject | WikiProject Ecology | Q10818384 |
P304 | page(s) | 422-444 | |
P577 | publication date | 2016-12-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Human Nature | Q5937288 |
P1476 | title | The Reproductive Ecology of Industrial Societies, Part I : Why Measuring Fertility Matters | |
P478 | volume | 27 |
Q47856870 | Cultural consonance, deprivation, and psychological responses for niche construction |
Q90101730 | Hired helpers at the nest: The association between life-cycle servants and net fertility in North Orkney, 1851-1911 |
Q48200946 | Local environmental quality positively predicts breastfeeding in the UK's Millennium Cohort Study |
Q47276255 | Modernizing Evolutionary Anthropology : Introduction to the Special Issue |
Q57480207 | Nicotinamide's Ups and Downs: Consequences for Fertility, Development, Longevity and Diseases of Poverty and Affluence |
Q39435001 | Support for new mothers and fertility in the United Kingdom: Not all support is equal in the decision to have a second child |
Q37410749 | The Reproductive Ecology of Industrial Societies, Part II : The Association between Wealth and Fertility. |
Q47107865 | The association of Social Anxiety Disorder, Alcohol Use Disorder and reproduction: Results from four nationally representative samples of adults in the USA. |
Q28076957 | Understanding variation in human fertility: what can we learn from evolutionary demography? |
Q36769923 | Wealth, fertility and adaptive behaviour in industrial populations |
Search more.