50 results on '"Huanca T"'
Search Results
2. Commonality and variation in mental representations of music revealed by a cross-cultural comparison of rhythm priors in 15 countries.
- Author
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Jacoby N, Polak R, Grahn JA, Cameron DJ, Lee KM, Godoy R, Undurraga EA, Huanca T, Thalwitzer T, Doumbia N, Goldberg D, Margulis EH, Wong PCM, Jure L, Rocamora M, Fujii S, Savage PE, Ajimi J, Konno R, Oishi S, Jakubowski K, Holzapfel A, Mungan E, Kaya E, Rao P, Rohit MA, Alladi S, Tarr B, Anglada-Tort M, Harrison PMC, McPherson MJ, Dolan S, Durango A, and McDermott JH
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Young Adult, Cognition physiology, Music psychology, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Auditory Perception physiology
- Abstract
Music is present in every known society but varies from place to place. What, if anything, is universal to music cognition? We measured a signature of mental representations of rhythm in 39 participant groups in 15 countries, spanning urban societies and Indigenous populations. Listeners reproduced random 'seed' rhythms; their reproductions were fed back as the stimulus (as in the game of 'telephone'), such that their biases (the prior) could be estimated from the distribution of reproductions. Every tested group showed a sparse prior with peaks at integer-ratio rhythms. However, the importance of different integer ratios varied across groups, often reflecting local musical practices. Our results suggest a common feature of music cognition: discrete rhythm 'categories' at small-integer ratios. These discrete representations plausibly stabilize musical systems in the face of cultural transmission but interact with culture-specific traditions to yield the diversity that is evident when mental representations are probed across many cultures., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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3. High life satisfaction reported among small-scale societies with low incomes.
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Galbraith ED, Barrington-Leigh C, Miñarro S, Álvarez-Fernández S, Attoh EMNAN, Benyei P, Calvet-Mir L, Carmona R, Chakauya R, Chen Z, Chengula F, Fernández-Llamazares Á, García-Del-Amo D, Glauser M, Huanca T, Izquierdo AE, Junqueira AB, Lanker M, Li X, Mariel J, Miara MD, Porcher V, Porcuna-Ferrer A, Schlingmann A, Seidler R, Shrestha UB, Singh P, Torrents-Ticó M, Ulambayar T, Wu R, and Reyes-García V
- Subjects
- Humans, Poverty, Societies, Social Problems, Income, Personal Satisfaction
- Abstract
Global polls have shown that people in high-income countries generally report being more satisfied with their lives than people in low-income countries. The persistence of this correlation, and its similarity to correlations between income and life satisfaction within countries, could lead to the impression that high levels of life satisfaction can only be achieved in wealthy societies. However, global polls have typically overlooked small-scale, nonindustrialized societies, which can provide an alternative test of the consistency of this relationship. Here, we present results from a survey of 2,966 members of Indigenous Peoples and local communities among 19 globally distributed sites. We find that high average levels of life satisfaction, comparable to those of wealthy countries, are reported for numerous populations that have very low monetary incomes. Our results are consistent with the notion that human societies can support very satisfying lives for their members without necessarily requiring high degrees of monetary wealth., Competing Interests: Competing interests statement:The authors declare no competing interest.
- Published
- 2024
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4. Cooling of alpaca spermatozoa using an extender with the addition of different percentages of seminal plasma.
- Author
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Bertuzzi ML, Torres EY, Durand MGP, Huanca T, Giuliano SM, and Carretero MI
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- Male, Animals, Semen, Sperm Motility, Spermatozoa, Chromatin, Camelids, New World, Semen Preservation veterinary, Semen Preservation methods
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the addition of different percentages of seminal plasma (SP) during the cooling at 5 °C of alpaca spermatozoa from vas deferens. Fifteen pools of sperm from vas deferens were evaluated and then divided into four aliquots that were diluted to a final concentration of 30 × 10
6 sperm/ml with either: (1) Tris with 20% egg yolk (T-EY) (control, 0% SP), (2) T-EY with 10% SP, (3) T-EY with 25% SP, and (4) T-EY with 50% SP. Samples were cooled at 5 °C and the following sperm parameters were evaluated after 24 and 48 h of storage: motility, viability, membrane function, acrosome integrity, morphology, and chromatin condensation. Motility was also evaluated after 72 h of storage. A significant decrease in progressive and total sperm motility was observed in samples cooled with 50% SP with respect to all diluted samples, while these parameters were preserved in samples cooled with 0%, 10%, and 25% SP. The percentages of sperm viability, normal morphology, and highly condensed chromatin did not change after the cooling process and were similar between cooled samples. Although a significant decrease was observed in the percentage of spermatozoa with functional membranes and with an intact acrosome in all refrigerated samples compared to raw sperm, the greatest decrease was observed in samples cooled with 50% SP. No advantage was observed from the addition of SP to alpaca spermatozoa obtained from vas deferens and being cooled. In addition, to preserve the sperm motility of cooled samples for up to 72 h, it should be recommended to include a 10% SP in the extender., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no declarations of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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5. The origins of the shape bias: Evidence from the Tsimane'.
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Jara-Ettinger J, Levy R, Sakel J, Huanca T, and Gibson E
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- Adult, Bolivia, Child, Humans, Learning, United States, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Language
- Abstract
In the United States, children often generalize the meaning of new words by assuming that objects with the same shape have the same name. We propose that this shape bias is influenced by children's exposure to objects of different categories (artifacts and natural kinds) and language to talk about them. We present a cross-cultural study between English speakers in the United States and Tsimane' speakers in the Bolivian Amazon. We found that U.S. children and adults were more likely to generalize novel labels by shape rather than by material or color, relative to Tsimane' participants. Critically, Tsimane' children and adults systematically avoided generalizing labels to objects that shared no common features with the novel referent. Our results provide initial evidence that the relative exposure to objects of different kinds and language to talk about them can lead to cross-cultural differences on object name learning. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
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6. People infer communicative action through an expectation for efficient communication.
- Author
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Royka A, Chen A, Aboody R, Huanca T, and Jara-Ettinger J
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- Humans, Movement, Recognition, Psychology, Communication, Motivation
- Abstract
Humans often communicate using body movements like winks, waves, and nods. However, it is unclear how we identify when someone's physical actions are communicative. Given people's propensity to interpret each other's behavior as aimed to produce changes in the world, we hypothesize that people expect communicative actions to efficiently reveal that they lack an external goal. Using computational models of goal inference, we predict that movements that are unlikely to be produced when acting towards the world and, in particular, repetitive ought to be seen as communicative. We find support for our account across a variety of paradigms, including graded acceptability tasks, forced-choice tasks, indirect prompts, and open-ended explanation tasks, in both market-integrated and non-market-integrated communities. Our work shows that the recognition of communicative action is grounded in an inferential process that stems from fundamental computations shared across different forms of action interpretation., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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7. Cross-cultural variation in thirst perception in hot-humid and hot-arid environments: Evidence from two small-scale populations.
- Author
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Rosinger AY, Bethancourt HJ, Swanson ZS, Lopez K, Kenney WL, Huanca T, Conde E, Nzunza R, Ndiema E, Braun DR, and Pontzer H
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- Adult, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Dehydration, Humans, Perception, Drinking Water, Thirst physiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Thirst is an evolved central homeostatic feedback system that helps regulate body water for survival. Little research has examined how early development and exposure to extreme environments and water availability affect thirst perception, particularly outside Western settings. Therefore, we compared two indicators of perceived thirst (current thirst and pleasantness of drinking water) using visual scales among Tsimane' forager-horticulturalists in the hot-humid Bolivian Amazon and Daasanach agro-pastoralists in hot-arid Northern Kenya., Methods: We examined how these measures of perceived thirst were associated with hydration status (urine specific gravity), ambient temperatures, birth season, age, and population-specific characteristics for 607 adults (n = 378 Tsimane', n = 229 Daasanach) aged 18+ using multi-level mixed-effect regressions., Results: Tsimane' had higher perceived thirst than Daasanach. Across populations, hydration status was unrelated to both measures of thirst. There was a significant interaction between birth season and temperature on pleasantness of drinking water, driven by Kenya data. Daasanach born in the wet season (in utero during less water availability) had blunted pleasantness of drinking water at higher temperatures compared to those born in the dry season (in utero during greater water availability)., Conclusions: Our findings suggest hydration status is not a reliable predictor of thirst perceptions in extreme-hot environments with ad libitum drinking. Rather, our findings, which require additional confirmation, point to the importance of water availability during gestation in affecting thirst sensitivity to heat and water feedback mechanisms, particularly in arid environments. Thirst regulation will be increasingly important to understand given climate change driven exposures to extreme heat and water insecurity., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. Hydration in relation to water insecurity, heat index, and lactation status in two small-scale populations in hot-humid and hot-arid environments.
- Author
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Bethancourt HJ, Swanson ZS, Nzunza R, Huanca T, Conde E, Kenney WL, Young SL, Ndiema E, Braun D, Pontzer H, and Rosinger AY
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Dehydration etiology, Female, Humans, Kenya epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Urinalysis, Young Adult, Dehydration epidemiology, Hot Temperature, Lactation, Urine chemistry, Water Insecurity
- Abstract
Objectives: This study compared the prevalence of concentrated urine (urine specific gravity ≥1.021), an indicator of hypohydration, across Tsimane' hunter-forager-horticulturalists living in hot-humid lowland Bolivia and Daasanach agropastoralists living in hot-arid Northern Kenya. It tested the hypotheses that household water and food insecurity would be associated with higher odds of hypohydration., Methods: This study collected spot urine samples and corresponding weather data along with data on household water and food insecurity, demographics, and health characteristics among 266 Tsimane' households (N = 224 men, 235 women, 219 children) and 136 Daasanach households (N = 107 men, 120 women, 102 children)., Results: The prevalence of hypohydration among Tsimane' men (50.0%) and women (54.0%) was substantially higher (P < .001) than for Daasanach men (15.9%) and women (17.5%); the prevalence of hypohydration among Tsimane' (37.0%) and Daasanach (31.4%) children was not significantly different (P = .33). Multiple logistic regression models suggested positive but not statistically significant trends between household water insecurity and odds of hypohydration within populations, yet some significant joint effects of water and food insecurity were observed. Heat index (2°C) was associated with a 23% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.09-1.40, P = .001), 34% (95% CI: 1.18-1.53, P < .0005), and 23% (95% CI: 1.04-1.44, P = .01) higher odds of hypohydration among Tsimane' men, women, and children, respectively, and a 48% (95% CI: 1.02-2.15, P = .04) increase in the odds among Daasanach women. Lactation status was also associated with hypohydration among Tsimane' women (odds ratio = 3.35, 95% CI: 1.62-6.95, P = .001)., Conclusion: These results suggest that heat stress and reproductive status may have a greater impact on hydration status than water insecurity across diverse ecological contexts., (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
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9. Comparison of Extenders With the Addition of Egg Yolk for Cooling Alpaca Sperm Obtained From Deferent Ducts.
- Author
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Bertuzzi ML, Torres EY, Huanca T, Neild D, and Carretero MI
- Abstract
The use of non-commercial and commercial extenders for cooling alpaca sperm has already been reported, the latter showing certain advantages over the first. The Andromed® (AM) extender was created for use in ruminants and has also been tested in ejaculated and epididymal alpaca sperm. According to the manufacturer, this extender does not need the addition of egg yolk (EY); however, it is known that the addition of EY to some extenders improves the preservation of cooled sperm. The objective of this study therefore was to compare a non-commercial extender (Tris) with the addition of EY vs. the commercial extender AM with and without the addition of EY, for cooling alpaca sperm obtained from diverted deferent ducts. Fifteen pools of deferent duct sperm were formed using samples from two or three different males for each. Each sperm pool was evaluated and then divided into three aliquots that were diluted to a final concentration of 30 × 10
6 sperm ml-1 (0 h) with either: (1) Tris with 20% EY (T-EY), (2) AM, or (3) AM with 20% EY (AM-EY). Samples were cooled to 5°C and the following sperm parameters were evaluated after 24 and 48 h of storage: motility, viability, membrane function, acrosome integrity, morphology, and chromatin condensation. Motility was also evaluated after 72 h of storage. The samples that best preserved progressive and total sperm motility at the 24 and 48 h evaluation periods were the ones diluted with AM-EY, observing that with this extender these motility patterns decreased significantly after 72 h of storage compared to time 0 h ( p < 0.05). A significant decrease ( p < 0.05) in total and progressive motility was observed at 48 h for the T-EY and AM extender compared to 0 h. AM was the only extender in which the percentages of viable sperm decreased significantly ( p < 0.05) after 48 h of conservation. For the rest of sperm parameters evaluated, no significant differences were observed between any of the extenders at any evaluation time. The Andromed® extender with the addition of 20% EY could be an alternative option for cooling alpaca sperm obtained from deferent ducts., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The handling editor declared a past co-authorship with the authors MC., (Copyright © 2020 Bertuzzi, Torres, Huanca, Neild and Carretero.)- Published
- 2020
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10. Author Correction: Free mate choice does not influence reproductive success in humans.
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Sorokowski P, Groyecka A, Karwowski M, Manral U, Kumar A, Niemczyk A, Marczak M, Misiak M, Sorokowska A, Huanca T, Conde E, Wojciszke B, and Pawłowski B
- Abstract
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.
- Published
- 2018
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11. Dietary customs and food availability shape the preferences for basic tastes: A cross-cultural study among Polish, Tsimane' and Hadza societies.
- Author
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Sorokowska A, Pellegrino R, Butovskaya M, Marczak M, Niemczyk A, Huanca T, and Sorokowski P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bolivia, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Poland, Tanzania, Young Adult, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Diet, Food Preferences, Food Supply, Taste
- Abstract
Biological significance of food components suggests that preferences for basic tastes should be similar across cultures. On the other hand, cultural factors play an important role in diet and can consequently influence individual preference for food. To date, very few studies have compared basic tastes preferences among populations of very diverse environmental and cultural conditions, and research rather did not involve traditional populations for whom the biological significance of different food components might be the most pronounced. Hence, our study focused on basic taste preferences in three populations, covering a broad difference in diet due to environmental and cultural conditions, market availability, dietary habits and food acquirement: 1) a modern society (Poles, n = 200), 2) forager-horticulturalists from Amazon/Bolivia (Tsimane', n = 138), and 3) hunter-gatherers from Tanzania (Hadza, n = 85). The preferences for basic tastes were measured with sprays containing supra-threshold levels of sweet, sour, bitter, salty, and umami taste solutions. We observed several interesting differences between participating societies. We found that Tsimane' and Polish participants liked the sweet taste more than other tastes, while Hadza participants liked salty and sour tastes more than the remaining tastes. Further, Polish people found bitter taste particularly aversive, which was not observed in the traditional societies. Interestingly, no cross-cultural differences were observed for relative liking of umami taste - it was rated closely to neutral by members of all participating societies. Additionally, Hadza showed a pattern to like basic tastes that are more common to their current diet than societies with access to different food sources. These findings demonstrate the impact of diet and market availability on preference for basic tastes., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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12. Free mate choice does not influence reproductive success in humans.
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Sorokowski P, Groyecka A, Karwowski M, Manral U, Kumar A, Niemczyk A, Marczak M, Misiak M, Sorokowska A, Huanca T, Conde E, Wojciszke B, and Pawłowski B
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproductive Behavior physiology, Family Characteristics, Fertility, Reproductive Behavior statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The effect of free mate choice on the relative magnitude of fitness benefits has been examined among various species. The majority of the data show significant fitness benefits of mating with partners of an individual's own choice, highlighting elevated behavioral compatibility between partners with free mate choice. Similarities between humans and other species that benefit from free mate choice led us to hypothesize that it also confers reproductive benefits in Homo sapiens. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a study among three indigenous societies-the Tsimane', Yali, and Bhotiya-who employ natural birth control. In all three samples, we compared the marriages arranged by parents with the non-arranged ones in terms of number of offspring. Here, we show that there were no significant relationships between type of marriage and the total number of alive children and number of dead children among the three sampled groups. The presented study is the first to date to examine the fitness benefits of free mate choice in humans. In discussion we present limitations of our research and discuss the possibility of love having a beneficial influence in terms of the number of offspring.
- Published
- 2017
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13. Money, Food, and Daily Life Objects Are Similarly Shared in the Dictator Game. A Study among Poles and Tsimane'.
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Sorokowski P, Oleszkiewicz A, Niemczyk A, Marczak M, Huanca T, Velasco EC, and Sorokowska A
- Abstract
The dictator game (DG) is one of the most popular methods for measuring sharing behaviors. However, the matter of goods used in the game has rarely been examined and discussed. We conducted a study in which all participants played standard version of DG in one of the three versions - "money," "food," or "daily life objects" sharing. Further, we wanted to expand the generalizability of our findings by investigating whether patterns in sharing various goods are independent of culture and the level of market integration. Thus, the study was conducted among people who function daily under the conditions of low market integration (109 Tsimane' - forager-horticulturists from Bolivian Amazon) and in a society highly integrated with the market-based economy (85 Polish people). We observed that among both Polish and Tsimane' people the participants were equally likely to share money, food and small, daily life objects with an unknown partner, which implies that generosity might not be related with the type of possessed resources. However, regardless of the kind of goods given, Tsimane' people were less eager to share with anonymous others than Polish people. We present several implications of our findings for studies on generosity and altruism.
- Published
- 2017
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14. Body height preferences and actual dimorphism in stature between partners in two non-Western societies (Hadza and Tsimane').
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Sorokowski P, Sorokowska A, Butovskaya M, Stulp G, Huanca T, and Fink B
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- Adult, Bolivia, Ethnopsychology, Female, Humans, Male, Sexual Behavior psychology, Tanzania, Western World, Body Height, Body Image psychology, Choice Behavior, Sexual Partners psychology
- Abstract
Body height influences human mate preferences and choice. A typical finding in Western societies is that women prefer men who are taller than themselves and, equivalently, men prefer women who are shorter than themselves. However, recent reports in non-Western societies (e.g., the Himba in Namibia) challenge the view on the universality of such preferences. Here we report on male and female height preferences in two non-Western populations--the Hadza (Tanzania) and the Tsimane' (Bolivia)--and the relationships between body height preferences and the height of actual partners. In the Hadza, most individuals preferred a sexual dimorphism in stature (SDS) with the man being much taller than the woman. Preferences for SDS and actual partner SDS were positively and significantly correlated in both men and women, suggesting that people who preferred larger height differences also had larger height differences with their partners. In the Tsimane', the majority of men preferred an SDS with the man being taller than the woman, but women did not show such a preference. Unlike in the Hadza, SDS preference was not significantly correlated to actual partner SDS. We conclude that patterns of height preferences and choices in the Hadza and Tsimane' are different than those observed in Western societies, and discuss possible causes for the observed differences between non-Western and Western societies.
- Published
- 2015
15. Preference for women's body mass and waist-to-hip ratio in Tsimane' men of the Bolivian Amazon: biological and cultural determinants.
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Sorokowski P, Kościński K, Sorokowska A, and Huanca T
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- Adolescent, Adult, Body Weights and Measures, Bolivia, Female, Fertility, Humans, Judgment, Male, Rainforest, Young Adult, Beauty, Body Mass Index, Culture, Waist-Hip Ratio
- Abstract
The issue of cultural universality of waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) attractiveness in women is currently under debate. We tested men's preferences for female WHR in traditional society of Tsimane'(Native Amazonians) of the Bolivian rainforest (N = 66). Previous studies showed preferences for high WHR in traditional populations, but they did not control for the women's body mass.We used a method of stimulus creation that enabled us to overcome this problem. We found that WHR lower than the average WHR in the population is preferred independent of cultural conditions. Our participants preferred the silhouettes of low WHR, but high body mass index (BMI), which might suggest that previous results could be an artifact related to employed stimuli. We found also that preferences for female BMI are changeable and depend on environmental conditions and probably acculturation (distance from the city). Interestingly, the Tsimane' men did not associate female WHR with age, health, physical strength or fertility. This suggests that men do not have to be aware of the benefits associated with certain body proportions - an issue that requires further investigation.
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- 2014
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16. Olfaction and environment: Tsimane' of Bolivian rainforest have lower threshold of odor detection than industrialized German people.
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Sorokowska A, Sorokowski P, Hummel T, and Huanca T
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- Adolescent, Adult, Bolivia, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odorants, Young Adult, Environment, Ethnicity, Industry, Sensory Thresholds physiology, Smell physiology, Trees
- Abstract
Olfactory sensitivity varies between individuals. However, data regarding cross-cultural and inter-group differences are scarce. We compared the thresholds of odor detection of the traditional society of Tsimane' (native Amazonians of the Bolivian rainforest; n = 151) and people living in Dresden (Germany; n = 286) using "Sniffin' Sticks" threshold subtest. Tsimane' detected n-butanol at significantly lower concentrations than the German subjects. The distribution of thresholds of the Tsimane' was very specific, with 25% of Tsimane' obtaining better results in the olfactory test than any member of the German group. These data suggest that differences in olfactory sensitivity seem to be especially salient between industrialized and non-industrialized populations inhabiting different environmental conditions. We hypothesize that the possible sources of such differences are: (i) the impact of pollution which impairs the olfactory abilities of people from industrialized countries; (ii) better training of olfaction because of the higher importance of smell in traditional populations; (iii) environmental pressures shaping olfactory abilities in these populations.
- Published
- 2013
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17. Adult obesity: panel study from native Amazonians.
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Zeng W, Eisenberg DT, Jovel KR, Undurraga EA, Nyberg C, Tanner S, Reyes-García V, Leonard WR, Castaño J, Huanca T, McDade TW, and Godoy R
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- Adipose Tissue, Body Mass Index, Bolivia ethnology, Economic Development trends, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Linear Models, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Indians, South American, Obesity ethnology
- Abstract
This paper examines three morphological indicators measuring obesity among a native Amazonian population of foragers-farmers in Bolivia (Tsimane') and estimates the associations between them and standard covariates of obesity (e.g., socioeconomic status [SES]). We collected annual data from 350 non-pregnant women and 385 men ≥20 years of age from all 311 households in 13 villages during five consecutive years (2002-2006). We used three indicators to measure obesity: body-mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), and body fat using bioelectrical impedance analysis (BF-BIA). We ran separate individual random-effect panel multiple regressions for women and men with wealth, acculturation, health, and household food availability as key covariates, and controlled for village and year fixed effects and village×year interaction effects. Although BMI increases by a statistically significant annual growth rate of 0.64% among women and 0.37% among men over the five years, the increase does not yield significant biological meanings. Neither do we find consistent and biologically meaningful covariates associated with adult obesity., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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18. Induction of superovulation in South American camelids.
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Ratto MH, Silva ME, Huanca W, Huanca T, and Adams GP
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- Animals, Embryo Transfer veterinary, Female, Ovarian Follicle drug effects, Ovarian Follicle physiology, Superovulation physiology, Camelids, New World physiology, Gonadotropins pharmacology, Superovulation drug effects
- Abstract
The development of assisted reproductive technologies such as embryo transfer (ET), artificial insemination (AI) and in vitro fertilization (IVF) in South American camelids is considerably behind that of other livestock species. Poor success of the embryo transfer technique has been related to a lack of an effective superstimulatory treatment, low embryo recovery rate, and the recovery of hatched blastocysts that are not conducive to the cryopreservation process. Superstimulation has been attempted using equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) during the luteal, or the sexually receptive phase, sometimes given at follicular wave emergence. The rationale for inducing a luteal phase prior to or during superstimulation in camelids is not clearly understood, but it may simply reflect an empirical bias to conventional methods used in other ruminants. The number of ovulations or CL varies widely among studies, ranging from 2 to more than 15 per animal, with the number of transferable embryos ranging from 0 to 4 per animal. The control of follicular growth combined with superstimulatory protocols has resulted in a more consistent ovarian response and a greater number of follicles available for aspiration and oocyte collection. Recent studies in llamas have demonstrated that the use of ovulation inducing treatments or follicle ablation can synchronize follicular wave emergence allowing the initiation of gonadotropin treatment in the absence of a dominant follicle resulting in a more consistent ovulatory response. Few studies in alpacas have been reported, but it appears from recent field studies that the ovarian response is more variable and that there is a greater number of poor responders than in llamas. A review of superstimulation protocols that have been used in llamas and alpacas in the last 15 years is provided, including a discussion of the potential of protocols designed to initiate treatment at specific stages of follicular growth., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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19. Diurnal cortisol rhythms and child growth: exploring the life history consequences of HPA activation among the Tsimane'.
- Author
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Nyberg CH, Leonard WR, Tanner S, McDade T, Huanca T, and Godoy RA
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- Acculturation, Bolivia, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Indians, South American psychology, Infant, Life Style, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Saliva chemistry, Sex Factors, Stress, Physiological, Stress, Psychological, Body Height, Circadian Rhythm, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System metabolism, Pituitary-Adrenal System metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: Although psychosocial stress has also been implicated as a contributor to growth failure by imposing energetic constraints during development, the direct physiological pathways by which these life history trade-offs are imposed are not well understood. This study explores associations between diurnal cortisol rhythms and differential patterns of linear child growth among the Tsimane, a horticulturalist and foraging society in the Bolivian Amazon., Methods: Waking and bedtime salivary cortisol samples (n = 243) were collected from 53 Tsimane' children ages 1.6-6 over 3 days as part of a larger study of developmental trajectories in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dynamics. Anthropometric measurements and survey data were collected in conjunction with the Tsimane' Amazonian panel study (TAPS)., Results: Among children under the age of 6, diurnal rhythms in stunted versus nonstunted children vary dramatically: stunted children display elevated cortisol at both the AM (P = 0.03) and PM (P = 0.02) collection points. Multilevel regression analysis demonstrates an inverse relationship between cortisol and height-for-age z-score status (P = 0.00), which is mediated, in part, by infection (P = 0.00), and is strongest among male children (n.s.). Moreover, the poorest statural growth is exhibited among children with high cortisol living in more acculturated Tsimane' communities, a proxy for a more adverse developmental milieu., Conclusions: This study reports a small, but significant, life history cost of elevated diurnal cortisol rhythms on linear growth among Tsimane' children, and provides critical insight into the developmental origins of health differentials among an indigenous Amazonian population experiencing rapid lifestyle changes., (Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2012
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20. The role of ethnobotanical skills and agricultural labor in forest clearance: evidence from the Bolivian Amazon.
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Reyes-García V, Pascual U, Vadez V, and Huanca T
- Subjects
- Bolivia, Models, Theoretical, Multivariate Analysis, Agriculture, Ethnobotany, Trees
- Abstract
Research on the benefits of local ecological knowledge for conservation lacks empirical data on the pathways through which local knowledge might affect natural resources management. We test whether ethnobotanical skills, a proxy for local ecological knowledge, are associated to the clearance of forest through their interaction with agricultural labor. We collected information from men in a society of gatherers-horticulturalist, the Tsimane' (Bolivia). Data included a baseline survey, a survey of ethnobotanical skills (n = 190 men), and two surveys on agricultural labor inputs (n = 466 plots). We find a direct effect of ethnobotanical skills in lowering the extent of forest cleared in fallow but not in old-growth forest. We also find that the interaction between ethnobotanical skills and labor invested in shifting cultivation has opposite effects depending on whether the clearing is done in old-growth or fallow forest. We explain the finding in the context of Tsimane' increasing integration to the market economy.
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- 2011
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21. The effects of local medicinal knowledge and hygiene on helminth infections in an Amazonian society.
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Tanner S, Chuquimia-Choque ME, Huanca T, McDade TW, Leonard WR, and Reyes-García V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Feces parasitology, Female, Hookworm Infections diagnosis, Humans, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Qualitative Research, Risk Factors, Rural Population, Sex Factors, Social Environment, Soil parasitology, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Hookworm Infections epidemiology, Hygiene, Medicine, Traditional, Poverty Areas
- Abstract
Social science has long recognized the importance of understanding how interactions between culture and behavior shape disease patterns, especially in resource-poor areas where individuals draw on multiple medical treatments to maintain health. While global health programs aimed at controlling high infection rates of soil-transmitted helminthes among indigenous groups often acknowledge the value of local culture, little research has been able to examine this value. This study investigates the association between parental ethnomedical knowledge, parental biomedical knowledge, and household sanitation behavior and childhood soil-transmitted helminth infections among a group of foragers-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane'). During 2007, a parasitological survey was completed for 329 children (≤ 16 years of age) from 109 households in combination with a comprehensive survey of both of the child's parents to assess biomedical and ethnomedical knowledge and household sanitary environment. Soil-transmitted helminthes were found to be common with 67% of sample positive for hookworm species. Indices that capture a household's relative state of risky and preventive hygienic behavior were significantly associated with risk of hookworm infection. Mother's but not father's ethnomedical knowledge was also negatively associated with a child's probability of being positive for hookworm infection. The effect was stronger for young children and boys. Like many rural populations, Tsimane' actively draw upon multiple medical systems to respond to health challenges. Integration into markets and national societies is likely to affect local medical systems by increasing the use of biomedicine as formal education prioritizes biomedical over ethnomedical systems. This study underscores the value of considering both ethnomedical knowledge systems and household hygiene in public health campaigns to treat and control soil-transmitted helminths. There is no question that providing medication is critical, but this study demonstrates that poverty is not synonymous with either poor hygiene or the lack of valuable ethnomedicinal knowledge., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2011
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22. Individual wealth rank, community wealth inequality, and self-reported adult poor health: a test of hypotheses with panel data (2002-2006) from native Amazonians, Bolivia.
- Author
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Undurraga EA, Nyberg C, Eisenberg DT, Magvanjav O, Reyes-García V, Huanca T, Leonard WR, McDade TW, Tanner S, Vadez V, and Godoy R
- Subjects
- Bolivia, Data Collection, Humans, Residence Characteristics, Self Report, Health Status, Hierarchy, Social, Income, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
Growing evidence suggests that economic inequality in a community harms the health of a person. Using panel data from a small-scale, preindustrial rural society, we test whether individual wealth rank and village wealth inequality affects self-reported poor health in a foraging-farming native Amazonian society. A person's wealth rank was negatively but weakly associated with self-reported morbidity. Each step up/year in the village wealth hierarchy reduced total self-reported days ill by 0.4 percent. The Gini coefficient of village wealth inequality bore a positive association with self-reported poor health that was large in size, but not statistically significant. We found small village wealth inequality, and evidence that individual economic rank did not change. The modest effects may have to do with having used subjective rather than objective measures of health, having small village wealth inequality, and with the possibly true modest effect of a person's wealth rank on health in a small-scale, kin-based society. Finally, we also found that an increase in mean individual wealth by village was related to worse self-reported health. As the Tsimane' integrate into the market economy, their possibilities of wealth accumulation rise, which may affect their well-being. Our work contributes to recent efforts in biocultural anthropology to link the study of social inequalities, human biology, and human-environment interactions.
- Published
- 2010
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23. Cultural consonance and body morphology: estimates with longitudinal data from an Amazonian society.
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Reyes-García V, Gravlee CC, McDade TW, Huanca T, Leonard WR, and Tanner S
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropology, Physical, Bolivia epidemiology, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Least-Squares Analysis, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Regression Analysis, Anthropology, Cultural methods, Body Mass Index, Life Style, Occupations, Socioeconomic Factors
- Abstract
Researchers have hypothesized that the degree to which an individual's actual behavior approximates the culturally valued lifestyle encoded in the dominant cultural model has consequences for physical and mental health. We contribute to this line of research by analyzing data from a longitudinal study composed of five annual surveys (2002-2006 inclusive) from 791 adults in one society of foragers-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon, the Tsimane'. We estimate the association between a standard measure of individual achievement of the cultural model, cultural consonance, and three indicators of body morphology. Drawing on research suggesting that in societies in the early stages of economic development an increase in socioeconomic status is associated with an increase in mean body mass, we expect to find a positive association between cultural consonance and three anthropometric measures. We found the expected positive association between cultural consonance and anthropometric measures-especially for men-only when using ordinary least square (OLS) regression models, but not when using fixed-effects regression models. The real magnitude of the association was low. The comparison of estimates from OLS and fixed-effect regression models suggests that previous findings on the effects of cultural consonance on body morphology using cross-sectional data should be read with caution because the association might be largely explained by fixed characteristics of individuals not accounted in OLS models., (© 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
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- 2010
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24. Fleece variation in alpaca (Vicugna pacos): a two-locus model for the Suri/Huacaya phenotype.
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Presciuttini S, Valbonesi A, Apaza N, Antonini M, Huanca T, and Renieri C
- Subjects
- Animals, Crosses, Genetic, Female, Male, Monte Carlo Method, Phenotype, Camelids, New World genetics, Hair, Models, Genetic
- Abstract
Background: Genetic improvement of fibre-producing animal species has often induced transition from double coated to single coated fleece, accompanied by dramatic changes in skin follicles and hair composition, likely implying variation at multiple loci. Huacaya, the more common fleece phenotype in alpaca (Vicugna pacos), is characterized by a thick dense coat growing perpendicularly from the body, whereas the alternative rare and more prized single-coated Suri phenotype is distinguished by long silky fibre that grows parallel to the body and hangs in separate, distinctive pencil locks. A single-locus genetic model has been proposed for the Suri-Huacaya phenotype, where Huacaya is recessive., Results: Two reciprocal experimental test-crosses (Suri x Huacaya) were carried out, involving a total of 17 unrelated males and 149 unrelated females. An additional dataset of 587 offspring of Suri x Suri crosses was analyzed. Segregation ratios, population genotype frequencies, and/or recombination fraction under different genetic models were estimated by maximum likelihood. The single locus model for the Suri/Huacaya phenotype was rejected. In addition, we present two unexpected observations: 1) a large proportion (about 3/4) of the Suri animals are segregating (with at least one Huacaya offspring), even in breeding conditions where the Huacaya trait would have been almost eliminated; 2) a model with two different values of the segregation ratio fit the data significantly better than a model with a single parameter., Conclusions: The data support a genetic model in which two linked loci must simultaneously be homozygous for recessive alleles in order to produce the Huacaya phenotype. The estimated recombination rate between these loci was 0.099 (95% C.L. = 0.029-0.204). Our genetic analysis may be useful for other species whose breeding system produces mainly half-sib families.
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- 2010
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25. Human's cognitive ability to assess facial cues from photographs: a study of sexual selection in the Bolivian Amazon.
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Undurraga EA, Eisenberg DT, Magvanjav O, Wang R, Leonard WR, McDade TW, Reyes-García V, Nyberg C, Tanner S, Huanca T, and Godoy RA
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- Bolivia, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Statistical, Photography, Cognition, Face, Selection, Genetic, Sexuality
- Abstract
Background: Evolutionary theory suggests that natural selection favors the evolution of cognitive abilities which allow humans to use facial cues to assess traits of others. The use of facial and somatic cues by humans has been studied mainly in western industrialized countries, leaving unanswered whether results are valid across cultures., Methodology/principal Findings: Our objectives were to test (i) if previous finding about raters' ability to get accurate information about an individual by looking at his facial photograph held in low-income non western rural societies and (ii) whether women and men differ in this ability. To answer the questions we did a study during July-August 2007 among the Tsimane', a native Amazonian society of foragers-farmers in Bolivia. We asked 40 females and 40 males 16-25 years of age to rate four traits in 93 facial photographs of other Tsimane' males. The four traits were based on sexual selection theory, and included health, dominance, knowledge, and sociability. The rating scale for each trait ranged from one (least) to four (most). The average rating for each trait was calculated for each individual in the photograph and regressed against objective measures of the trait from the person in the photograph. We found that (i) female Tsimane' raters were able to assess facial cues related to health, dominance, and knowledge and (ii) male Tsimane' raters were able to assess facial cues related to dominance, knowledge, and sociability., Conclusions/significance: Our results support the existence of a human ability to identify objective traits from facial cues, as suggested by evolutionary theory.
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- 2010
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26. Short but catching up: statural growth among native Amazonian Bolivian children.
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Godoy R, Nyberg C, Eisenberg DT, Magvanjav O, Shinnar E, Leonard WR, Gravlee C, Reyes-García V, McDade TW, Huanca T, and Tanner S
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Body Height, Body Weight, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Sex Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Child Development physiology, Child Nutrition Disorders ethnology, Child Nutrition Disorders physiopathology, Indians, South American
- Abstract
The ubiquity and consequences of childhood growth stunting (<-2 SD in height-for-age Z score, HAZ) in rural areas of low-income nations has galvanized research into the reversibility of stunting, but the shortage of panel data has hindered progress. Using panel data from a native Amazonian society of foragers-farmers in Bolivia (Tsimane'), we estimate rates of catch-up growth for stunted children. One hundred forty-six girls and 158 boys 2 < or = age < or = 7 were measured annually during 2002-2006. Annual Delta height in cm and in HAZ were regressed separately against baseline stunting and control variables related to attributes of the child, mother, household, and village. Children stunted at baseline had catch-up growth rates 0.11 SD/year higher than their nonstunted age and sex peers, with a higher rate among children farther from towns. The rate of catch up did not differ by the child's sex. A 10% rise in household income and an additional younger sibling lowered by 0.16 SD/year and 0.53 SD/year the rate of growth. Results were weaker when measuring Delta height in cm rather than in HAZ. Possible reasons for catch-up growth include (a) omitted variable bias, (b) parental reallocation of resources to redress growth faltering, particularly if parents perceive the benefits of redressing growth faltering for child school achievement, and (c) developmental plasticity during this period when growth rates are most rapid and linear growth trajectories have not yet canalized.
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- 2010
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27. Cultural consonance and psychological well-being. Estimates using longitudinal data from an Amazonian society.
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Reyes-García V, Gravlee CC, McDade TW, Huanca T, Leonard WR, and Tanner S
- Subjects
- Adult, Bolivia, Emotions, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Life Style, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Young Adult, Culture, Personal Satisfaction, Population Groups
- Abstract
Researchers have hypothesized that the degree to which an individual's actual behavior approximates the culturally valued lifestyle encoded in the dominant cultural model has consequences for physical and mental health. We contribute to this line of research by analyzing data from a longitudinal study composed of five annual surveys (2002-2006 inclusive) of 791 adults in one society of foragers-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon, the Tsimane'. We estimate the association between a standard measure of individual achievement of the cultural model and (a) four indicators of psychological well-being (sadness, anger, fear and happiness) and (b) consumption of four potentially addictive substances (alcohol, cigarette, coca leaves and home-brewed beer) as indicators of stress behavior. After controlling for individual fixed effects, we found a negative association between individual achievement of the cultural model and psychological distress and a positive association between individual achievement of the cultural model and psychological well-being. Only the consumption of commercial alcohol bears the expected negative association with cultural consonance in material lifestyle, probably because the other substances analyzed have cultural values attached. Our work contributes to research on psychological health disparities by showing that a locally defined and culturally specific measure of lifestyle success is associated with psychological health.
- Published
- 2010
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28. Why no adult stunting penalty or height premium? Estimates from native Amazonians in Bolivia.
- Author
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Godoy R, Magvanjav O, Nyberg C, Eisenberg DT, McDade TW, Leonard WR, Reyes-García V, Huanca T, Tanner S, and Gravlee C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Bolivia, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Indians, South American, Linear Models, Male, Young Adult, Body Height physiology, Child Development physiology, Personal Satisfaction, Social Class
- Abstract
Among adults of industrial nations, growth stunting (<-2 SD height Z score) is associated with worse indicators of adult well-being (e.g., income). Does adult stunting also inflict private costs in traditional societies? Adult stunting penalties or height premiums might only emerge when traditional societies modernize. Here we estimate the association between adult stunting and indicators of adult well-being using data from a panel study in progress among the Tsimane', a foraging-farming society of native Amazonians in Bolivia. Subjects included 248 women and 255 men >or=age 22 measured annually during 5 consecutive years (2002-2006). Nine outcomes (wealth, monetary income, illness, access to credit, mirth, schooling, math skills, plant knowledge, forest clearance) were regressed separately against a stunting dummy variable and a wide range of control variables. We found no significant association between any of the indicators of own well-being and adult stunting. Additional analysis showed that stunting bore an association only with poorer mid-arm muscle area. Height premiums and stunting penalties, though evident and marked in modern societies, might not be common in all traditional societies., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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29. Ovarian response and embryo production in llamas treated with equine chorionic gonadotropin alone or with a progestin-releasing vaginal sponge at the time of follicular wave emergence.
- Author
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Huanca W, Cordero A, Huanca T, Cardenas O, Adams GP, and Ratto MH
- Subjects
- Animals, Camelids, New World embryology, Contraceptive Devices, Female, Embryo, Mammalian, Female, Horses, Medroxyprogesterone Acetate administration & dosage, Ovarian Follicle drug effects, Ovarian Follicle growth & development, Ovulation Induction methods, Ovulation Induction veterinary, Progestins administration & dosage, Camelids, New World physiology, Chorionic Gonadotropin pharmacology, Embryonic Development drug effects, Medroxyprogesterone Acetate pharmacology, Ovary drug effects, Progestins pharmacology
- Abstract
The objective of the study was to compare the ovulatory response and embryo production in llamas (Lama glama) treated with a single dose of equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) alone or combined with intravaginal medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) at the time of follicular wave emergence. Llamas with a growing follicle >or=7 mm in diameter were assigned to one of the following groups: (1) Control (n=28): Nonstimulated llamas were mated and embryos were collected 7 d after mating. (2) eCG (n=32): Llamas were given 5mg luteinizing hormone (LH) (Day 0) to induce ovulation, 1000 IU eCG on Day 2, a luteolytic dose of prostaglandin F(2alpha) on Day 6, mating on Day 7, and embryo collection on Day 14. (3) eCG+MPA (n=34): Llamas were treated as those in the eCG group, but a sponge containing 60 mg MPA was placed intravaginally from Days 2 to 6. Llamas that did not respond to synchronization or superstimulation were excluded, leaving data from n=26, 26, and 27 in the control, eCG, and eCG+MPA groups, respectively, for statistical analysis. The mean (+/-SD) number of follicles>7 mm at the time of mating was greatest in the eCG group, intermediate in the eCG+MPA group, and lowest in the control group (16.6+/-5.3, 12.9+/-3.7, and 1.0+/-0.0, respectively, P<0.001). The number of corpora lutea was similar between eCG and eCG+MPA groups (10.1+/-2.9 and 8.6+/-3.7, respectively); both were higher (P<0.001) than in controls (0.9+/-0.3). The number of embryos did not differ significantly between the eCG and eCG+MPA groups (4.8+/-2.8 and 3.5+/-3.0, respectively), but both were higher (P<0.001) than in the controls (0.7+/-0.4). In conclusion, eCG, with or without MPA effectively induced a superovulatory response and multiple embryo production in llamas.
- Published
- 2009
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30. Influence of helminth infections on childhood nutritional status in lowland Bolivia.
- Author
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Tanner S, Leonard WR, McDade TW, Reyes-Garcia V, Godoy R, and Huanca T
- Subjects
- Animals, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child Nutrition Disorders etiology, Child, Preschool, Female, Helminthiasis ethnology, Hookworm Infections complications, Hookworm Infections ethnology, Humans, Indians, South American, Infant, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ethnology, Male, Body Weights and Measures, Child Nutrition Disorders ethnology, Helminthiasis complications, Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic complications
- Abstract
Infectious disease, such as diarrheal disease, respiratory infections, and parasitic infections, are an important source of nutritional and energetic stress in many populations. Inspired by the research and methodological innovations of A. Roberto Frisancho, this work considers the impact of childhood environment and local disease ecology on child health and nutritional patterns among an indigenous group in lowland Bolivia. Specifically, we examine the association between soil-transmitted helminth infection, especially hookworm species, and anthropometric markers of short- and long-term nutritional status. Fecal samples, anthropometric dimensions, and health interviews were collected for 92 children ranging in age from 2.0 to 10.9 years. Microscopic examination revealed high levels of parasitic infection, with 76% of children positive for hookworm species infections (77% of girls and 74% of boys). Less common infections included Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichurius trichiura, and Strongyloides stercoralis with only 15% of children positive for multiple-species infections. After adjusting for sex and age, no statistically significant associations were observed between helminth infections and the frequency of reported illness or anthropometric measures of nutritional status. These data demonstrate the difficulty of assessing nutritional impacts of endemic infections.
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- 2009
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31. Inequality in social rank and adult nutritional status: evidence from a small-scale society in the Bolivian Amazon.
- Author
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Reyes-García V, Molina JL, McDade TW, Tanner SN, Huanca T, and Leonard WR
- Subjects
- Adult, Body Mass Index, Bolivia, Data Collection, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Regression Analysis, Socioeconomic Factors, Nutritional Status, Social Class, Social Dominance
- Abstract
Research on the social determinants of health has highlighted (a) the adverse effects of social inequality on individual health and (b) the association between individual social rank and health. In this paper, we contribute to the growing literature on the health consequences of social inequalities by assessing the association between village level inequality in social rank, a form of non-material inequality, and indicators of nutritional status. We use quantitative survey information from 289 men (18+ years of age) from a society of forager-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane'). We construct village level measures of non-material inequality by using individual measures of men's positions in the village hierarchy according to prestige (or freely conferred deference) and dominance (or social rank obtained through power). We find that village inequality in dominance, but not village inequality in prestige, is associated with short-term indices of individual nutritional status. Doubling the coefficient of variation of dominance in a village would be associated to a 6.7% lower BMI, a 7.9% smaller mid-arm circumference, and a 27.1% smaller sum of four skin folds of men in the village. We also find that once we decouple individual social rank based on dominance from individual social rank based on prestige, only prestige-based social rank is associated with nutritional status. Potential explanations for our findings relate to the differential forms of resource access derived from the two forms of social hierarchies and to the social and psychological benefits associated with prestige versus the social costs and psychological stress generated by dominance.
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- 2009
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32. Social rank and adult male nutritional status: evidence of the social gradient in health from a foraging-farming society.
- Author
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Reyes-García V, McDade TW, Molina JL, Leonard WR, Tanner SN, Huanca T, and Godoy R
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropometry, Bolivia, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personal Autonomy, Social Support, Young Adult, Agriculture, Nutritional Status, Social Class
- Abstract
Research with humans and non-human primate species has found an association between social rank and individual health. Among humans, a robust literature in industrial societies has shown that each step down the rank hierarchy is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Here, we present supportive evidence for the social gradient in health drawing on data from 289 men (18+ years of age) from a society of foragers-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane'). We use a measure of social rank that captures the locally perceived position of a man in the hierarchy of important people in a village. In multivariate regression analysis we found a positive and statistically significant association between social rank and three standard indicators of nutritional status: body mass index (BMI), mid-arm circumference, and the sum of four skinfolds. Results persisted after controlling for material and psychosocial pathways that have been shown to mediate the association between individual socioeconomic status and health in industrial societies. Future research should explore locally-relevant psychosocial factors that may mediate the association between social status and health in non-industrial societies.
- Published
- 2008
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33. Maintenance versus growth: investigating the costs of immune activation among children in lowland Bolivia.
- Author
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McDade TW, Reyes-García V, Tanner S, Huanca T, and Leonard WR
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Body Height, Body Weight, Bolivia, Child, Child, Preschool, Culture, Female, Geography, Health Status, Humans, Life Style, Male, Skinfold Thickness, Socioeconomic Factors, Growth physiology, Immune System physiology
- Abstract
Immune function is a central component of maintenance effort, and it provides critical protection against the potentially life threatening effects of pathogens. However, immune defenses are energetically expensive, and the resources they consume are not available to support other activities related to growth and/or reproduction. In our study we use a life history theory framework to investigate tradeoffs between maintenance effort and growth among children in a remote area of Amazonian Bolivia. Baseline concentrations of C-reactive protein (CRP) were measured in 309 2- to 10-year olds as an indicator of immune activation, and height was measured at baseline and three months later. Elevated CRP at baseline predicts smaller gains in height over the subsequent three months, with the costs to growth particularly high for 2- to 4-year olds and for those with low energy reserves (in the form of body fat) at the time of immunostimulation. These results provide evidence for a significant tradeoff between investment in immunity and growth in humans, and highlight an important physiological mechanism through which maintenance effort may have lasting effects on child growth and development., (Copyright 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2008
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34. Developmental changes in the relationship between leptin and adiposity among Tsimané children and adolescents.
- Author
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Sharrock KC, Kuzawa CW, Leonard WR, Tanner S, Reyes-García VE, Vadez V, Huanca T, and McDade TW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Anthropometry, Body Mass Index, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Energy Metabolism, Female, Humans, Male, Nutritional Status, Obesity physiopathology, Pilot Projects, Adiposity, Leptin metabolism, Obesity epidemiology, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
Leptin is thought to signal energy stores, thus helping the body balance energy intake and expenditure. However, the strong relationship between leptin and adiposity in populations with adequate nutrition or common obesity is not universal across ecologic contexts, and leptin often correlates only weakly, or not at all, with adiposity in populations of lean or marginally-nourished males. To clarify whether the relationship between adiposity and leptin changes during development, this study examines leptin and body fat among children and adolescents of lowland Bolivia. Anthropometric measures of body composition and dried blood spot samples were collected from 487 Tsimane' ranging from 2 to 15 years of age. Leptin was assayed using an enzyme immunoassay protocol validated for use with blood spot samples. In this population, leptin concentrations were among the lowest reported in a human population (mean +/- SD: 1.26 +/- 0.5 and 0.57 +/- 0.3 in females and males). In addition, the relationship between leptin and adiposity follows distinct developmental trajectories in males and females. In males, leptin is weakly correlated with most measures of body composition at all ages investigated. However, in females, the level of body fat and the strength of the correlation between body fat and leptin (a measure of its strength as a signal of energy stores) both increase markedly with age. These findings suggest a more important role of leptin as a signal of energy stores among females as they approach reproductive maturity, while raising questions about the function of this hormone in lean males., (Copyright 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2008
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35. Rain, temperature, and child-adolescent height among Native Amazonians in Bolivia.
- Author
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Godoy R, Goodman E, Reyes-Garcia V, Eisenberg DT, Leonard WR, Huanca T, McDade TW, Tanner S, and Jha N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Bolivia ethnology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Parents, Pregnancy, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects epidemiology, Puberty physiology, Seasons, Body Height physiology, Indians, South American, Rain, Temperature
- Abstract
Background: Global climate change and recent studies on early-life origins of well-being suggest that climate events early in life might affect health later in life., Aim: The study tested hypotheses about the association between the level and variability of rain and temperature early in life on the height of children and adolescents in a foraging-farming society of native Amazonians in Bolivia (Tsimane')., Subject and Methods: Measurements were taken for 525 children aged 2-12 and 218 adolescents aged 13-23 in 13 villages in 2005. Log of standing height was regressed on mean annual level and mean intra-annual monthly coefficient of variation (CV) of rain and mean annual level of temperature during gestation, birth year, and ages 2-4. Controls include age, quinquennium and season of birth, parent's attributes, and dummy variables for surveyors and villages., Results: Climate variables were only related with the height of boys age 2-12. The level and CV of rain during birth year and the CV of rain and level of temperature during ages 2-4 were associated with taller stature. There were no secular changes in temperature (1973-2005) or rain (1943-2005)., Conclusion: The height of young females and males is well protected from climate events, but protection works less well for boys ages 2-12.
- Published
- 2008
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36. The effect of rainfall during gestation and early childhood on adult height in a foraging and horticultural society of the Bolivian Amazon.
- Author
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Godoy R, Tanner S, Reyes-García V, Leonard WR, McDade TW, Vento M, Broesch J, Fitzpatrick IC, Giovannini P, and Huanca T
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropology, Physical, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child Development physiology, Child, Preschool, Environmental Exposure, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pregnancy, Seasons, Body Height physiology, Growth and Development physiology, Indians, South American, Rain
- Abstract
Recent research documents the effects of adverse conditions during gestation and early childhood on growth responses and health throughout life. Most research linking adverse conditions in early life with adult health comes from industrial nations. We know little about the plasticity of growth responses to environmental perturbations early in life among foragers and horticulturalists. Using 2005 data from 211 women and 215 men 20+ years of age from a foraging-horticultural society of native Amazonians in Bolivia (Tsimane'), we estimate the association between (a) adult height and (b) rainfall amount and variability during three stages in the life cycle: gestation (year 0), birth year (year 1), and years 2-5. We control for confounders such as height of the same-sex parent. Rainfall amount and variability during gestation and birth year bore weak associations with adult height, probably from the protective role of placental physiology and breastfeeding. However, rainfall variability during years 2-5 of life bore a negative association with adult female height. Among women, a 10% increase in the coefficient of variation of rainfall during years 2-5 was associated with 0.7-1.2% lower adult height (1.08-1.93 cm). Environmental perturbations that take place after the cessation of weaning seem to leave the strongest effect on adult height. We advance possible explanations for the absence of effects among males., ((c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2008
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37. Ethnobotanical skills and clearance of tropical rain forest for agriculture: a case study in the lowlands of Bolivia.
- Author
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Reyes-García V, Vadez V, Tanner S, Huanca T, Leonard WR, and McDade T
- Subjects
- Bolivia, Geography, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Agriculture, Ethnobotany, Rain, Trees, Tropical Climate
- Abstract
Indigenous peoples are often considered potential allies in the conservation of biological diversity. Here we assess whether ethnobotanical skills of indigenous people contribute to a reduction in the clearance of tropical rain forest. We measured ethnobotanical skills of male household heads and area of rain forest cleared for agriculture among 128 households of Tsimane', a native Amazonian group in Bolivia. We used multivariate regressions to estimate the relation between ethnobotanical skills and area of rain forest cleared while controlling for schooling, health status, number of plots cleared, adults in household, and village of residency. We found that when the ethnobotanical skills of the male household head were doubled, the amount of tropical rain forest cleared per household was reduced by 25%. The association was stronger when the area of old-growth forest cleared was used as the dependent variable than when the area cleared from fallow forest was used as the dependent variable. People who use the forest for subsistence might place a higher value on standing forest than people who do not use it, and thus they may be more reluctant to cut down the forest.
- Published
- 2007
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38. Ethnobotanical knowledge is associated with indices of child health in the Bolivian Amazon.
- Author
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McDade TW, Reyes-García V, Blackinton P, Tanner S, Huanca T, and Leonard WR
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropometry, Body Mass Index, Bolivia, C-Reactive Protein analysis, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Likelihood Functions, Male, Prospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, Ethnicity psychology, Ethnobotany, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Status Indicators
- Abstract
Culture is a critical determinant of human behavior and health, and the intergenerational transmission of knowledge regarding the use of available plant resources has historically been an essential function of culture. Local ethnobotanical knowledge is important for health and nutrition, particularly in rural low-resource settings, but cultural and economic transitions associated with globalization threaten such knowledge. This prospective study investigates the association between parental ethnobotanical knowledge and child health among the Tsimane', a horticulturalist and foraging society in Amazonian Bolivia. Anthropometric data and capillary blood samples were collected from 330 Tsimane' 2- to 10-year-olds, and mothers and fathers were interviewed to assess ethnobotanical knowledge and skills. Comprehensive measures of parental schooling, acculturation, and economic activities were also collected. Dependent variables included three measures of child health: (i) C-reactive protein, assayed in whole-blood spots as an indicator of immunostimulation; (ii) skinfold thickness, to estimate subcutaneous fat stores necessary to fuel growth and immune function; and (iii) height-for-age, to assess growth stunting. Each child health measure was associated with maternal ethnobotanical knowledge, independent of a wide range of potentially confounding variables. Each standard deviation of maternal ethnobotanical knowledge increased the likelihood of good child health by a factor of >1.5. Like many populations around the world, the Tsimane' are increasingly facing the challenges and opportunities of globalization. These results underscore the importance of local cultural factors to child health and document a potential cost if ethnobotanical knowledge is lost.
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
39. On the accuracy of perceived parental height in a native Amazonian society.
- Author
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Patel AM, Godoy RA, Seyfried C, Reyes-García V, Huanca T, Leonard WR, McDade TW, and Tanner S
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Sex Factors, Body Height, Data Collection methods, Indians, South American statistics & numerical data, Parents
- Abstract
Studies of secular trends in adult height in rural pre-literate societies are likely to show no change owing to random measurement error in age. In such societies, adults lack birth certificates and guess when estimating their age. We assess the accuracy of perceived height of the same-sex parent to estimate secular trends. We tested the method among the Tsimane', a native Amazonian society of farmers and foragers in Bolivia. Subjects included 268 women and 287 men >20 years of age. Over half the sample reported inaccurately the height of their same-sex living parent, with a tendency to report no difference when, in fact, differences existed. Results highlight the pitfalls of using perceived parental height to examine secular trends in adult height among the Tsimane', though the method might yield accurate information in other societies. We discuss possible reasons for the low accuracy of Tsimane' estimates.
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
40. Does village inequality in modern income harm the psyche? Anger, fear, sadness, and alcohol consumption in a pre-industrial society.
- Author
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Godoy RA, Reyes-García V, McDade T, Huanca T, Leonard WR, Tanner S, and Vadez V
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Bolivia, Female, Humans, Indians, South American, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Models, Econometric, Rural Population, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking economics, Emotions, Income, Social Support, Stress, Psychological economics
- Abstract
Researchers have found a positive association between income inequality and poor individual health. To explain the link, researchers have hypothesized that income inequality erodes community social capital, which unleashes negative emotions, stress, and stress behaviors that hurt health. Few studies have tested the hypothesized path. Here we estimate the association between (a) village income inequality and social capital, and (b) three distinct negative emotions (anger, fear, sadness) and one stress behavior (alcohol consumption). We use four quarters of panel data (2002-2003) from 655 adults in 13 villages of a foraging-farming society in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane'). We found that: (1) village income inequality was associated with more negative emotions but with less alcohol consumption, (2) social capital always bore a negative association with outcomes, and (3) results held up after introducing many changes to the main model. We conclude that village income inequality probably affects negative emotions and stress behaviors through other paths besides social capital because we conditioned for social capital. One such path is an innate dislike of inequality, which might have pre-human origins. Our prior research with the Tsimane' suggests that village income inequality bore an insignificant association with individual health. Therefore, village income inequality probably affects negative emotions and stress behaviors before undermining health.
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- 2006
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41. Physical stature of adult Tsimane' Amerindians, Bolivian Amazon in the 20th century.
- Author
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Godoy RA, Leonard WR, Reyes-García V, Goodman E, McDade T, Huanca T, Tanner S, and Vadez V
- Subjects
- Adult, Anthropometry methods, Bolivia, Female, Humans, Male, Nutritional Status, Western World, Body Height physiology, Population Groups
- Abstract
We examine the association between exposure to the market and Western society on the height of adult Tsimane', a foraging-farming society in the Bolivian Amazon. As with other contemporary native peoples, we find little evidence of a significant secular change in height during 1920-1980. Female height bore a positive association with own schooling and fluency in spoken Spanish and with maternal modern human capital (schooling, writing ability, and fluency in spoken Spanish), but male heights bore no association with parental height or with modern human capital. The absence of a secular change likely reflects the persistence of traditional forms of social organization and production that protect health.
- Published
- 2006
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42. Why do mothers favor girls and fathers, boys? : A hypothesis and a test of investment disparity.
- Author
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Godoy R, Reyes-García V, McDade T, Tanner S, Leonard WR, Huanca T, Vadez V, and Patel K
- Abstract
Growing evidence suggests mothers invest more in girls than boys and fathers more in boys than girls. We develop a hypothesis that predicts preference for girls by the parent facing more resource constraints and preference for boys by the parent facing less constraint. We test the hypothesis with panel data from the Tsimane', a foraging-farming society in the Bolivian Amazon. Tsimane' mothers face more resource constraints than fathers. As predicted, mother's wealth protected girl's BMI, but father's wealth had weak effects on boy's BMI. Numerous tests yielded robust results, including those that controlled for fixed effects of child and household.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Evaluating indices of traditional ecological knowledge: a methodological contribution.
- Author
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Reyes-García V, Vadez V, Tanner S, McDade T, Huanca T, and Leonard WR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Bolivia, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Humans, Indians, South American, Male, Plant Extracts, Research, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Ecology methods, Ecology standards, Ethnobotany methods, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Herbal Medicine
- Abstract
Background: New quantitative methods to collect and analyze data have produced novel findings in ethnobiology. A common application of quantitative methods in ethnobiology is to assess the traditional ecological knowledge of individuals. Few studies have addressed reliability of indices of traditional ecological knowledge constructed with different quantitative methods., Methods: We assessed the associations among eight indices of traditional ecological knowledge from data collected from 650 native Amazonians. We computed Spearman correlations, Chronbach's alpha, and principal components factor analysis for the eight indices., Results: We found that indices derived from different raw data were weakly correlated (rho<0.5), whereas indices derived from the same raw data were highly correlated (rho>0.5; p < 0.001). We also found a relatively high internal consistency across data from the eight indices (Chronbach's alpha = 0.78). Last, results from a principal components factor analysis of the eight indices suggest that the eight indices were positively related, although the association was low when considering only the first factor., Conclusion: A possible explanation for the relatively low correlation between indices derived from different raw data, but relatively high internal consistency of the eight indices is that the methods capture different aspects of an individual's traditional ecological knowledge. To develop a reliable measure of traditional ecological knowledge, researchers should collect raw data using a variety of methods and then generate an aggregated measure that contains data from the various components of traditional ecological knowledge. Failure to do this will hinder cross-cultural comparisons.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Predictors of C-reactive protein in Tsimane' 2 to 15 year-olds in lowland Bolivia.
- Author
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McDade TW, Leonard WR, Burhop J, Reyes-García V, Vadez V, Huanca T, and Godoy RA
- Subjects
- Acculturation, Adolescent, Age Distribution, Biomarkers blood, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child Development, Child, Preschool, Communicable Diseases blood, Cross-Sectional Studies, Environment, Female, Geography, Humans, Male, Sex Distribution, Socioeconomic Factors, C-Reactive Protein immunology, C-Reactive Protein metabolism, Communicable Diseases ethnology, Communicable Diseases immunology, Indians, South American statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Infectious disease is a major global determinant of child morbidity and mortality, and energetic investment in immune defenses (even in the absence of overt disease) is an important life-history variable, with implications for human growth and development. This study uses a biomarker of immune activation (C-reactive protein) to investigate an important aspect of child health among the Tsimane', a relatively isolated Amerindian population in lowland Bolivia. Our objectives are twofold: 1) to describe the distribution of CRP by age and gender in a cross-sectional sample of 536 2-15-year-olds; and 2) to explore multiple measures of pathogen exposure, economic resources, and acculturation as predictors of increased CRP. The median blood-spot CRP concentration was 0.73 mg/l, with 12.9% of the sample having concentrations greater than 5 mg/L, indicating a relatively high degree of immune activation in this population. Age was the strongest predictor of CRP, with the highest concentrations found among younger individuals. Increased CRP was also associated with higher pathogen exposure, lower household economic resources, and increased maternal education and literacy. The measurement of CRP offers a direct, objective indicator of immune activation, and provides insights into a potentially important pathway through which environmental quality may shape child growth and health., (2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2005
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45. Effects on the quality of frozen-thawed alpaca (Lama pacos) semen using two different cryoprotectants and extenders.
- Author
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Santiani A, Huanca W, Sapana R, Huanca T, Sepúlveda N, and Sánchez R
- Subjects
- Animals, Camelids, New World, Cryoprotective Agents administration & dosage, Male, Sperm Motility, Freezing, Semen, Semen Preservation
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate two extenders and two cryoprotectant agents (CPA) for alpaca semen cryopreservation., Methods: Semen samples were obtained from four adult alpacas (Lama pacos) and frozen using extender I (TRIS, citrate, egg yolk and glucose) or extender II (skim milk, egg yolk and fructose), each containing either glycerol (G) or ethylene glycol (EG) as CPA. Consequently, four groups were formed: 1) extender I-G; 2) extender I-EG; 3) extender II-G; and 4) extender II-EG. Semen was diluted in a two-step process: for cooling to 5 degrees (extenders without CPA), and for freezing (extenders with CPA). Viability and acrosome integrity were assessed using trypan blue and Giemsa stains., Results: When compared, the motility after thawing was higher (P >0.05) in groups II-EG (20.0% +/- 6.7%) and II-G (15.3 % +/- 4.1% ) than that in groups I-G (4.0 % +/- 1.1%) and I-EG (1.0 % +/- 1.4%). Viable spermatozoa with intact acrosomes in groups II-EG (18.7 % +/- 2.9%) and II-G (12.7 % +/- 5.9%) were higher than that in groups I-G (5.7% +/- 1.5%) and I-EG (4.0% +/- 1.0%)., Conclusion: The skim milk- and egg yolk-based extenders containing ethylene glycol or glycerol to freeze alpaca semen seems to promote the survival of more sperm cells with intact acrosomes than the other extenders.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Income inequality and adult nutritional status: anthropometric evidence from a pre-industrial society in the Bolivian Amazon.
- Author
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Godoy R, Byron E, Reyes-García V, Vadez V, Leonard WR, Apaza L, Huanca T, Pérez E, and Wilkie D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anthropometry, Bolivia, Female, Humans, Indians, South American, Male, Rural Population, Body Weights and Measures, Nutritional Status, Poverty
- Abstract
Evidence has been accumulated about the adverse effects of income inequality on individual health in industrial nations, but we know less about its effect in small-scale, pre-industrial rural societies. Income inequality should have modest effects on individual health. First, norms of sharing and reciprocity should reduce the adverse effects of income inequality on individual health. Second, with sharing and reciprocity, personal income will spill over to the rest of the community, attenuating the protective role of individual income on individual health found in industrial nations. We test these ideas with data from Tsimane' Amerindians, a foraging and farming society in the Bolivian Amazon. Subjects included 479 household heads (13+ years of age) from 58 villages. Dependent variables included anthropometric indices of short-run nutritional status (body-mass index (BMI), and age- and sex-standardized z-scores of mid-arm muscle area and skinfolds). Proxies for income included area deforested per person the previous year and earnings per person in the last 2 weeks. Village income inequality was measured with the Gini coefficient. Income inequality did not correlate with anthropometric indices, most likely because of negative indirect effects from the omission of social-capital variables, which would lower the estimated impact of income inequality on health. The link between BMI and income and between skinfolds and income resembled a U and an inverted U; income did not correlate with mid-arm muscle area. The use of an experimental research design might allow for better estimates of how income inequality affects social capital and individual health.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Physical growth and nutritional status of Tsimane' Amerindian children of lowland Bolivia.
- Author
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Foster Z, Byron E, Reyes-García V, Huanca T, Vadez V, Apaza L, Pérez E, Tanner S, Gutierrez Y, Sandstrom B, Yakhedts A, Osborn C, Godoy RA, and Leonard WR
- Subjects
- Age Distribution, Bolivia epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Growth Disorders epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Nutrition Assessment, Nutritional Status, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, Thinness epidemiology, Body Size ethnology, Body Size physiology, Child Development physiology, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena physiology, Indians, South American statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This study examines patterns of growth and nutritional status of indigenous Tsimane' children under 9 years of age (n = 199 boys and 210 girls), based on a cross-sectional sample from 58 villages from the Beni Deparment of lowland Bolivia. Compared with US children, Tsimane' children are quite short, with linear growth tracking at or below the US 5th centile in both sexes. The prevalence of low height-for-age ("stunting;" HA Z-scores =-2) is 52% in boys and 43% in girls. In contrast, weight-for-height in Tsimane' children approximates the US median, with the prevalence of low weight-for-height ("wasting"; WH Z-scores =-2) being only 4% and 6% in boys and girls, respectively. Tsimane' boys and girls are leaner than their US peers, but their levels of body fatness are not so low as to indicate severe energy stress. Arm muscularity of Tsimane' children is similar to that of their US age peers, and this suggests that they are not experiencing acute protein malnutrition. Variation in measures of nutritional status of Tsimane' children is modestly correlated with village-level differences. Degree of isolation, as measured by distance to urban centers or to primary forest, was not a strong predictor of children's anthropometric status. Rather, in both boys and girls, nutritional status was most strongly associated with number of teachers in the village, a measure of access to education. Comparative analyses indicate that high levels of statural growth stunting are common among indigenous populations throughout lowland South America. This problem appears to be largely attributable to poor dietary quality (diets low in key micronutrients) and high disease loads. Further research is needed to identify the specific causes and potential interventions for the high rates of childhood growth stunting in this region., ((c) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Human capital, wealth, and nutrition in the Bolivian Amazon.
- Author
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Godoy R, Reyes-García V, Vadez V, Leonard WR, Huanca T, and Bauchet J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Agriculture, Anthropometry, Bolivia, Diet economics, Female, Humans, Indians, South American, Male, Middle Aged, Rural Population, Socioeconomic Factors, Body Weights and Measures economics, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
We analyze anthropometric variables of a society of forager-horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane') in 2001-2002. Community variables (e.g., inequality, social capital) explain little of the variance in anthropometric indices of nutritional status, but individual-level variables (schooling, wealth) are positively correlated with nutritional status. Dietary quality (foods high in animal proteins), access to foraging technology, and traditional knowledge of medicinal plants are related to better anthropometric indices.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ethnobotanical knowledge shared widely among Tsimane' Amerindians, Bolivia.
- Author
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Reyes-Garcia V, Godoy R, Vadez V, Apaza L, Byron E, Huanca T, Leonard WR, Pérez E, and Wilkie D
- Subjects
- Bolivia, Phytotherapy, Plants, Edible, Plants, Medicinal, Surveys and Questionnaires, Ethnobotany, Indians, South American, Knowledge
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Ethnographic studies of ARI in Bolivia and their use by the national ARI programme.
- Author
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Hudelson P, Huanca T, Charaly D, and Cirpa V
- Subjects
- Bolivia epidemiology, Cause of Death, Child, Preschool, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Medicine, Traditional, Patient Care Team, Pneumonia, Bacterial mortality, Pneumonia, Bacterial prevention & control, Respiratory Tract Infections mortality, Respiratory Tract Infections prevention & control, Rural Population, United Nations, Developing Countries, Health Education methods, Pneumonia, Bacterial ethnology, Respiratory Tract Infections ethnology
- Abstract
Acute respiratory infections (ARI) are responsible for one quarter to one third of all deaths in infants and young children, with most deaths being attributed to pneumonia. At present, few measures exist to prevent pneumonia. However, most pneumonia deaths can be averted by treatment with an appropriate antibiotic. The effectiveness of this strategy depends on families' ability to recognize the signs of pneumonia, and to promptly seek care from a trained health practitioner. In order for health workers to communicate effectively with families about how to care for children with ARI, what signs to watch for, and when to come back for care, they need to know how families perceive and respond to respiratory infections. The WHO ARI Programme has recently developed a research protocol for conducting ethnographic studies of community perceptions and practices related to ARI. The purpose of this protocol is describe communities' explanatory models for ARI, identify cultural and other factors that facilitate or constrain appropriate home care and careseeking for children with ARI, and make recommendations to national ARI programmes about how to develop effective communication activities. This paper reports on two studies conducted in Bolivia using the WHO/ARI Focused Ethnographic Study (FES) protocol, and describes the way in which the data were utilized by the national ARI programme.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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