Literature DB >> 18337281

Juvenility in the context of life history theory.

Z Hochberg1.   

Abstract

Homo sapiens is unique in having four prolonged and pronounced postnatal pre-adult life history stages: infancy, which lasts for 30-36 months and ends with weaning from breast feeding in traditional societies; childhood, which lasts for an additional 2-4 years and concludes in a degree of independence as regards protection and food provision; a juvenile stage of 3-4 years that terminates with readiness for sexual maturation; and adolescence, which lasts for 3-5 years and culminates in fertility. Juvenility implies two transitional periods which are only experienced by humans: a transition from childhood to juvenility and from juvenility to adolescence. Juvenility, "the age of reason and responsibility" and concrete operation, coincides with elementary school age and offers opportunities to prepare for the social complexity of adolescence. Here I define the transition to juvenility by three variables: adrenarche (the onset of adrenal androgen generation), growth pattern (decelerating from a linear childhood growth velocity) and adiposity rebound acceleration of body mass index. The data presented suggest that this period is endowed with programming/predictive adaptive responses of body composition to the environment.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18337281     DOI: 10.1136/adc.2008.137570

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Dis Child        ISSN: 0003-9888            Impact factor:   3.791


  13 in total

Review 1.  Middle childhood and modern human origins.

Authors:  Jennifer L Thompson; Andrew J Nelson
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2011-09

Review 2.  Child health, developmental plasticity, and epigenetic programming.

Authors:  Z Hochberg; R Feil; M Constancia; M Fraga; C Junien; J-C Carel; P Boileau; Y Le Bouc; C L Deal; K Lillycrop; R Scharfmann; A Sheppard; M Skinner; M Szyf; R A Waterland; D J Waxman; E Whitelaw; K Ong; K Albertsson-Wikland
Journal:  Endocr Rev       Date:  2010-10-22       Impact factor: 19.871

3.  Predicting pubertal development by infantile and childhood height, BMI, and adiposity rebound.

Authors:  Alina German; Michael Shmoish; Ze'ev Hochberg
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2015-07-07       Impact factor: 3.756

4.  Adrenarche and middle childhood.

Authors:  Benjamin C Campbell
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2011-09

5.  Evolutionary fitness as a function of pubertal age in 22 subsistence-based traditional societies.

Authors:  Ze'ev Hochberg; Aneta Gawlik; Robert S Walker
Journal:  Int J Pediatr Endocrinol       Date:  2011-06-21

Review 6.  Adrenal androgens and androgen precursors-definition, synthesis, regulation and physiologic actions.

Authors:  Adina Turcu; Joshua M Smith; Richard Auchus; William E Rainey
Journal:  Compr Physiol       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 9.090

Review 7.  Bioenergetic Evolution Explains Prevalence of Low Nephron Number at Birth: Risk Factor for CKD.

Authors:  Robert L Chevalier
Journal:  Kidney360       Date:  2020-07-07

8.  Evolutionary perspective in child growth.

Authors:  Ze'ev Hochberg
Journal:  Rambam Maimonides Med J       Date:  2011-07-31

Review 9.  Evo-devo of human adolescence: beyond disease models of early puberty.

Authors:  Ze'ev Hochberg; Jay Belsky
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2013-04-29       Impact factor: 8.775

10.  Developmental plasticity in child growth and maturation.

Authors:  Ze'ev Hochberg
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 5.555

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