journal articleIn the first paper to present formal theory explaining that senescence is a consequence of natural selection, W. D. Hamilton concluded that human postmenopausal longevity results from the contributions of ancestral grandmothers to the reproduction of their relatives. A grandmother hypothesis, subsequently elaborated with additional lines of evidence, helps explain both exceptional longevity and additional features of life history that distinguish humans from the other great apes. However, some of the variation observed in aging rates seems inconsistent with the tradeoffs between current and future reproduction identified by theory. In humans and chimpanzees, our nearest living relatives, individuals who bear offspring at fast...
Two kinds of evidence suggest that female fertility may end at an earlier age in modern people than ...
Menopause is an evolutionary mystery: how could living longer with no capacity to reproduce possibly...
Two striking differences between humans and our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and gorillas, ...
journal articleA grandmother hypothesis may explain why humans evolved greater longevity while conti...
journal articleWomen and female great apes both continue giving birth into their forties, but not be...
journal articlePostmenopausal longevity may have evolved in our lineage when ancestral grandmothers ...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Evolutionary life-history theory and demography provide strong reasons to suppose that long human li...
Although females in human and the great ape populations reach the end of fertility at similar ages (...
Compared to chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the onset of aging appears to be delayed in the human spe...
Long postmenopausal lifespans distinguish humans from all other primates. This pattern may have ev...
SummaryHuman menopause is remarkable in that reproductive senescence is markedly accelerated relativ...
Biological species have evolved characteristic patterns of age-specific mortality across their life ...
Journal ArticleHuman life history is characterised by a long juvenile period (weaning to reproductiv...
Two kinds of evidence suggest that female fertility may end at an earlier age in modern people than ...
Menopause is an evolutionary mystery: how could living longer with no capacity to reproduce possibly...
Two striking differences between humans and our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and gorillas, ...
journal articleA grandmother hypothesis may explain why humans evolved greater longevity while conti...
journal articleWomen and female great apes both continue giving birth into their forties, but not be...
journal articlePostmenopausal longevity may have evolved in our lineage when ancestral grandmothers ...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
In a recent issue of this journal, Herndon [1] discussed the grandmother hypothesis and its implicat...
Evolutionary life-history theory and demography provide strong reasons to suppose that long human li...
Although females in human and the great ape populations reach the end of fertility at similar ages (...
Compared to chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the onset of aging appears to be delayed in the human spe...
Long postmenopausal lifespans distinguish humans from all other primates. This pattern may have ev...
SummaryHuman menopause is remarkable in that reproductive senescence is markedly accelerated relativ...
Biological species have evolved characteristic patterns of age-specific mortality across their life ...
Journal ArticleHuman life history is characterised by a long juvenile period (weaning to reproductiv...
Two kinds of evidence suggest that female fertility may end at an earlier age in modern people than ...
Menopause is an evolutionary mystery: how could living longer with no capacity to reproduce possibly...
Two striking differences between humans and our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and gorillas, ...