Publications by authors named "U A Liberman"

Mathematical models of conformity and anti-conformity have commonly included a set of simplifying assumptions. For example, (1) there are m=2 cultural variants in the population, (2) naive individuals observe the cultural variants of n=3 adult "role models," and (3) individuals' levels of conformity or anti-conformity do not change over time. Three recent theoretical papers have shown that departures from each of these assumptions can produce new population dynamics.

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In this narrative review, we present data gathered over four decades (1980-2020) on the epidemiology, pathophysiology and genetics of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT). PHPT is typically a disease of postmenopausal women, but its prevalence and incidence vary globally and depend on a number of factors, the most important being the availability to measure serum calcium and parathyroid hormone levels for screening. In the Western world, the change in presentation to asymptomatic PHPT is likely to occur, over time also, in Eastern regions.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study expands upon existing models of cultural trait transmission by examining how conformity and anticonformity operate among multiple variants, rather than just two.
  • It shows that with a specific number of role models, anticonformity leads to a stable equilibrium of certain traits, while conformity can cause a population to converge towards fewer traits, potentially diminishing diversity.
  • The findings suggest new avenues for empirical research to quantify individual biases in cultural trait preferences, offering insights into how varied traits can coexist in populations.
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Humans and nonhuman animals display conformist as well as anticonformist biases in cultural transmission. Whereas many previous mathematical models have incorporated constant conformity coefficients, empirical research suggests that the extent of (anti)conformity in populations can change over time. We incorporate stochastic time-varying conformity coefficients into a widely used conformity model, which assumes a fixed number n of "role models" sampled by each individual.

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