The Grandmother Effect: Implications for Studies on Aging and Cognition
Author(s) -
James G. Herndon
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
gerontology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.397
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1423-0003
pISSN - 0304-324X
DOI - 10.1159/000236045
Subject(s) - fertility , life expectancy , primate , natural fertility , trait , cognition , natural selection , psychology , developmental psychology , demography , biology , gerontology , population , medicine , neuroscience , family planning , sociology , computer science , research methodology , programming language
Women experience more years of vigorous life after ovulation has ceased than do females of other primate species. Is this an epiphenomenon of the greater life expectancy humans have enjoyed in the past century or so, or is long post-menopausal survival the result of an evolutionary selection process? Recent research implies the latter: Long post-menopausal survival came about through natural selection. One prominent line of thought explaining this selection process is the grandmother hypothesis.
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