Publications by authors named "J Stieglitz"

Human foragers avoid noncommunicable diseases that are leading causes of mortality, partly because physically active lifestyles promote healthy aging. High activity levels also promote tissue damage accumulation from wear-and-tear, increase risk of injury and disability which compromise productivity, and reduce energetic investments in somatic maintenance given constrained energy expenditure. Constraints intensify when nutrient supply is limited and surplus energy is directed toward pathogen defense and reproduction, as occurred throughout hominin evolution.

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Subjective well-being (SWB) is often described as being U-shaped over adulthood, declining to a midlife slump and then improving thereafter. Improved SWB in later adulthood has been considered a paradox given age-related declines in health and social losses. While SWB has mostly been studied in high-income countries, it remains largely unexplored in rural subsistence populations lacking formal institutions that reliably promote social welfare.

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Characterizing DNA methylation patterns is important for addressing key questions in evolutionary biology, geroscience, and medical genomics. While costs are decreasing, whole-genome DNA methylation profiling remains prohibitively expensive for most population-scale studies, creating a need for cost-effective, reduced representation approaches (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Industrialized environments, while offering benefits such as better education and lower infection rates, may contribute to brain atrophy, prompting a comparison of brain volume changes in industrialized versus non-industrialized populations.* -
  • The Tsimane and Moseten are two indigenous Bolivian groups studied, with the Tsimane showing increased brain volume in certain areas with age, while the UK Biobank participants experience a significant decrease in brain volume over time, particularly in frontal and temporal regions.* -
  • The findings suggest that lifestyle factors, including physical activity levels, may influence brain volume changes, with Tsimane males exhibiting surprising increases in some brain areas, while Tsimane females show greater decreases compared to UK Biobank females.*
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Although still prevalent in many human societies, the practice of cousin marriage has precipitously declined in populations undergoing rapid demographic and socioeconomic change. However, it is still unclear whether changes in the structure of the marriage pool or changes in the fitness-relevant consequences of cousin marriage more strongly influence the frequency of cousin marriage. Here, we use genealogical data collected by the Tsimane Health and Life History Project to show that there is a small but measurable decline in the frequency of first cross-cousin marriage since the mid-twentieth century.

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