Literature DB >> 26181749

Autism as the Low-Fitness Extreme of a Parentally Selected Fitness Indicator.

Andrew Shaner1, Geoffrey Miller2, Jim Mintz3.   

Abstract

Siblings compete for parental care and feeding, while parents must allocate scarce resources to those offspring most likely to survive and reproduce. This could cause offspring to evolve traits that advertise health, and thereby attract parental resources. For example, experimental evidence suggests that bright orange filaments covering the heads of North American coot chicks may have evolved for this fitness-advertising purpose. Could any human mental disorders be the equivalent of dull filaments in coot chicks-low-fitness extremes of mental abilities that evolved as fitness indicators? One possibility is autism. Suppose that the ability of very young children to charm their parents evolved as a parentally selected fitness indicator. Young children would vary greatly in their ability to charm parents, that variation would correlate with underlying fitness, and autism could be the low-fitness extreme of this variation. This view explains many seemingly disparate facts about autism and leads to some surprising and testable predictions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autism; Fitness indicator; Parental selection; Sexual selection; Sibling rivalry

Year:  2008        PMID: 26181749     DOI: 10.1007/s12110-008-9049-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Nat        ISSN: 1045-6767


  66 in total

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3.  Better red than dead: carotenoid-based mouth coloration reveals infection in barn swallow nestlings.

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Authors:  S U Peters; A L Beaudet; N Madduri; C A Bacino
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Review 5.  Autism: a window onto the development of the social and the analytic brain.

Authors:  Simon Baron-Cohen; Matthew K Belmonte
Journal:  Annu Rev Neurosci       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 12.449

Review 6.  Autism as a paradigmatic complex genetic disorder.

Authors:  Jeremy Veenstra-Vanderweele; Susan L Christian; Edwin H Cook
Journal:  Annu Rev Genomics Hum Genet       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 8.929

7.  Delayed parenthood and the risk of cesarean delivery--is paternal age an independent risk factor?

Authors:  Chao-Hsiun Tang; Ming-Ping Wu; Jin-Tan Liu; Herng-Ching Lin; Chun-Chyang Hsu
Journal:  Birth       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 3.689

8.  Just how happy is the happy puppet? An emotion signaling and kinship theory perspective on the behavioral phenotype of children with Angelman syndrome.

Authors:  William M Brown; Nathan S Consedine
Journal:  Med Hypotheses       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 1.538

9.  Strong association of de novo copy number mutations with autism.

Authors:  Jonathan Sebat; B Lakshmi; Dheeraj Malhotra; Jennifer Troge; Christa Lese-Martin; Tom Walsh; Boris Yamrom; Seungtai Yoon; Alex Krasnitz; Jude Kendall; Anthony Leotta; Deepa Pai; Ray Zhang; Yoon-Ha Lee; James Hicks; Sarah J Spence; Annette T Lee; Kaija Puura; Terho Lehtimäki; David Ledbetter; Peter K Gregersen; Joel Bregman; James S Sutcliffe; Vaidehi Jobanputra; Wendy Chung; Dorothy Warburton; Mary-Claire King; David Skuse; Daniel H Geschwind; T Conrad Gilliam; Kenny Ye; Michael Wigler
Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-03-15       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 10.  X-linked imprinting: effects on brain and behaviour.

Authors:  William Davies; Anthony R Isles; Paul S Burgoyne; Lawrence S Wilkinson
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 4.345

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  2 in total

1.  The evolution of autistic-like and schizotypal traits: a sexual selection hypothesis.

Authors:  Marco Del Giudice; Romina Angeleri; Adelina Brizio; Marco R Elena
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2010-08-30

2.  Evolutionary approaches to autism- an overview and integration.

Authors:  Annemie Ploeger; Frietson Galis
Journal:  Mcgill J Med       Date:  2011-06
  2 in total

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