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Physical activity and time budgets of Hadza forager children: Implications for self-provisioning and the ontogeny of the sexual division of labor.

Andrew W FroehleG Kilian WellsTrevor R PollomAudax Z P MabullaSheina Lew-LevyAlyssa N Crittenden
Published in: American journal of human biology : the official journal of the Human Biology Council (2018)
These results show that, among the Hadza, a sexual division of labor begins to emerge in middle childhood and is well in place by adolescence. Furthermore, foraging tends to provide net caloric gains, suggesting that children are capable of reducing at least some of the energetic burden they place upon their parents or alloparents. The findings are relevant to our understanding of the ways in which young foragers allocate their time, the development of sex-specific behavior patterns, and the capacity of children's work efforts to offset the cost of their own care in a cooperative breeding environment.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • physical activity
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • depressive symptoms
  • risk factors
  • middle aged
  • early life
  • affordable care act