We model the effects of Schumperterian 'selecton pressures' -- in particular Apartheid and the neoliberal 'market economy' -- on organizational cognition in minority communities, given the special role of culture in human biology. Our focus is on the dual-function social networks by which culture is imposed and maintained on individuals and by which immediate patterns of opportunity and threat are recognized and given response. A mathematical model based on recent advances in complexity theory displays a joint cross-scale linkage of social, individual central nervous system, and immune cognition with external selection pressure through mixed and synergistic punctuated 'learning plateaus.' This provides a natural mechanism for addressing ...
Health inequalities are conspicuously persistent through time and often durable even in spite of int...
How self-organization leads to the emergence of structure in social populations remains a fascinatin...
By focusing on the studies of primate behaviour and human neuroscience, we describe how different ne...
On both empirical and theoretical grounds we find that a particular form of social hierarchy, here c...
What is the origin of individual differences in ideology and personality? According to the parasite ...
This dissertation investigates the relationship between the biological system and the sociocultural ...
Health inequalities are a persistent feature of our societal landscape. Health inequalities reflect ...
Cognition in living entities -- and their social groupings or institutional artifacts -- is necessar...
We examine the implications of IR Cohen's 'cognitive principle' address of the immune system [1-3] f...
Increasing social inequalities in health have been ascribed to unequal distribution of resources, an...
'Racial' disparities among cancers, particularly of the breast and prostate, are something of a myst...
International audienceThis paper argues that social selection, materialist/structural and cultural/b...
Why did humans become as intelligent as they are? The Social Brain Hypothesis claims that general ab...
One of the most intriguing dynamics in biological systems is the emergence of clustering, in the sen...
Measures of biological variation have long been associated with many indices of social inequality. D...
Health inequalities are conspicuously persistent through time and often durable even in spite of int...
How self-organization leads to the emergence of structure in social populations remains a fascinatin...
By focusing on the studies of primate behaviour and human neuroscience, we describe how different ne...
On both empirical and theoretical grounds we find that a particular form of social hierarchy, here c...
What is the origin of individual differences in ideology and personality? According to the parasite ...
This dissertation investigates the relationship between the biological system and the sociocultural ...
Health inequalities are a persistent feature of our societal landscape. Health inequalities reflect ...
Cognition in living entities -- and their social groupings or institutional artifacts -- is necessar...
We examine the implications of IR Cohen's 'cognitive principle' address of the immune system [1-3] f...
Increasing social inequalities in health have been ascribed to unequal distribution of resources, an...
'Racial' disparities among cancers, particularly of the breast and prostate, are something of a myst...
International audienceThis paper argues that social selection, materialist/structural and cultural/b...
Why did humans become as intelligent as they are? The Social Brain Hypothesis claims that general ab...
One of the most intriguing dynamics in biological systems is the emergence of clustering, in the sen...
Measures of biological variation have long been associated with many indices of social inequality. D...
Health inequalities are conspicuously persistent through time and often durable even in spite of int...
How self-organization leads to the emergence of structure in social populations remains a fascinatin...
By focusing on the studies of primate behaviour and human neuroscience, we describe how different ne...