Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1601423780> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1601423780 endingPage "196" @default.
- W1601423780 startingPage "131" @default.
- W1601423780 abstract "Humans interface with their physical environment through a complex series of biocultural mechanisms. This range of interaction allows a wide variation in phenotypes. Humans use culture so extensively that inclinations for complex symbolic communication and patterns of social interaction may be genetically programmed as are the physical and neurological structures on which these activities depend (Durham 1991). Inter-individual communication allowing experiences to be retained across generations provides opportunities to inhabit a variety of ecological settings. Therein, local populations may develop both biological and social/cultural/behavioral variability while responding to environmental and sociocultural circumstances. Such local adaptive responses allow populations to differ significantly in phenotype from others residing elsewhere (Crews and Bindon 1991). All populations tend to maintain relatively constant living environments that provide human needs for food, shelter, reproduction, and infant/child care, and promote survival of their members. This similarity across multiple external environments allowed humans to maintain a 99.5% genetic similarity across their range. Although cultural systems alter local populations by restricting mate choice and concepts of ideal mates, thereby producing socioculturally determined selection, wide-ranging human populations remain a single interbreeding species, unlike many wide-ranging non-human groups (Lasker and Crews 1996). Humans all share the same physiology and basic life history, and remain susceptible to the same internal processes of senescence. With larger numbers of individuals surviving to their later decades of life, this similarity is revealed as a senescing soma that loses function across multiple integrated systems associated with chronic degenerative processes. Local selective pressures (e.g., malaria, cold, hypoxia, solar radiation, plant toxins, viruses, bacteria) produce variations in behavioral, sociocultural, and biological responses across populations, but the underlying degenerative processes remain the same." @default.
- W1601423780 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1601423780 creator A5018207677 @default.
- W1601423780 date "2003-12-11" @default.
- W1601423780 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W1601423780 title "Human variation: chronic diseases, risk factors, and senescence" @default.
- W1601423780 cites W111108193 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1561761755 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1561873451 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1569148428 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1579548254 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1598326569 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1600112653 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1600610840 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1658682427 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1696148154 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1842826833 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1846863680 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1887820262 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1901983160 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1914228723 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1917926680 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1919970019 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1934184954 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1938310987 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1940527306 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1963855588 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1963917943 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1965421615 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1966645907 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1966730781 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1966899336 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1967949542 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1968050221 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1969166280 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1969577113 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1969751613 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1969872867 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1970091384 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1970924140 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1971920837 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1972884431 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1973754944 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1974534603 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1975334244 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1975991013 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1976833120 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1977440819 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1978762354 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1980041930 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1980469788 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1980533762 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1981067737 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1982647833 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1982835526 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1983673827 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1984058728 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1984121447 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1984288923 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1984513597 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1985591678 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1986060547 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1987328145 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1987453996 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1988612821 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1988757966 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1989033613 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1989381175 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1989609040 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1990115112 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1991234664 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1991408099 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1991615758 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1992444940 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1992747785 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1993091967 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1993688323 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1994328501 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1995044639 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1995236483 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1996706211 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1997439652 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1999588314 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W1999976563 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2000435897 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2000636375 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2000905165 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2001082461 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2001158238 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2001597020 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2002203210 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2002256043 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2003402136 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2003592043 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2003985793 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2004002095 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2004244220 @default.
- W1601423780 cites W2004314923 @default.