Human paternal investment, and that of many other species, is facultatively expressed and dependent on a diverse array of individual, social, and ecological conditions. Well-documented are the various ways in which men invest in offspring and the household. Specifically, local ecology structures pay-offs to male investment and has been shown to be an important predictor of the sexual division of labor. However, while variability in paternal investment has been well-characterized cross-culturally, plasticity within a group in response to changing socioecological conditions remains largely unstudied. To address this, we use recent economic development and market access to explore how changes in socioecology alter behavioral options for men an...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank the Tsawout and Tseycum First Nations bands for allowing access to Mandarte...
While paternal investment is a defining feature of human behavioral biology, it is also considerably...
33 Anderson, K.G. et al. (1999) Paternal care by genetic and step fathers I: reports from Albuquerqu...
The role of male parental investment has recently been the subject of much research and debate in an...
Paternal provisioning is ubiquitous in human subsistence societies and unique among apes. How could ...
Paternal provisioning among humans is puzzling because it is rare among primates and absent in nonhu...
An evolutionary model of facultative reproductive strategies explains much of women's life history s...
Paternal investment is predicted to be a facultative calculation based on expected fitness returns a...
We develop a theoretical model of mating behavior and parental investment in children under asymmetr...
addresses: Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Universi...
Parenting in Homo sapiens is rather different to parenting in most other primates. Our long developm...
Independent of ecology, subsistence strategy, social complexity, or other aspects of socioecology, t...
The findings about the ways in which components of men\u27s human capital is translated into human c...
Variability in men’s reproductive success (RS) is partly attributable to the ability of successful m...
In this paper we will argue that there are a multiplicity of motives that affect the formation of wo...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank the Tsawout and Tseycum First Nations bands for allowing access to Mandarte...
While paternal investment is a defining feature of human behavioral biology, it is also considerably...
33 Anderson, K.G. et al. (1999) Paternal care by genetic and step fathers I: reports from Albuquerqu...
The role of male parental investment has recently been the subject of much research and debate in an...
Paternal provisioning is ubiquitous in human subsistence societies and unique among apes. How could ...
Paternal provisioning among humans is puzzling because it is rare among primates and absent in nonhu...
An evolutionary model of facultative reproductive strategies explains much of women's life history s...
Paternal investment is predicted to be a facultative calculation based on expected fitness returns a...
We develop a theoretical model of mating behavior and parental investment in children under asymmetr...
addresses: Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Universi...
Parenting in Homo sapiens is rather different to parenting in most other primates. Our long developm...
Independent of ecology, subsistence strategy, social complexity, or other aspects of socioecology, t...
The findings about the ways in which components of men\u27s human capital is translated into human c...
Variability in men’s reproductive success (RS) is partly attributable to the ability of successful m...
In this paper we will argue that there are a multiplicity of motives that affect the formation of wo...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank the Tsawout and Tseycum First Nations bands for allowing access to Mandarte...
While paternal investment is a defining feature of human behavioral biology, it is also considerably...
33 Anderson, K.G. et al. (1999) Paternal care by genetic and step fathers I: reports from Albuquerqu...