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Environmental harshness and unpredictability, life history, and social and academic behavior of adolescents in nine countries.

Lei ChangHui Jing LuJennifer E LansfordAnn T SkinnerMarc H BornsteinLaurence SteinbergKenneth A DodgeBin Bin ChenQian TianDario BacchiniKirby Deater-DeckardConcetta PastorelliLiane Peña AlampayEmma SorbringSuha M Al-HassanPaul OburuPatrick S MaloneLaura Di GiuntaLiliana Maria Uribe TiradoSombat Tapanya
Published in: Developmental psychology (2018)
Safety is essential for life. To survive, humans and other animals have developed sets of psychological and physiological adaptations known as life history (LH) tradeoff strategies in response to various safety constraints. Evolutionarily selected LH strategies in turn regulate development and behavior to optimize survival under prevailing safety conditions. The present study tested LH hypotheses concerning safety based on a 6-year longitudinal sample of 1,245 adolescents and their parents from 9 countries. The results revealed that, invariant across countries, environmental harshness, and unpredictability (lack of safety) was negatively associated with slow LH behavioral profile, measured 2 years later, and slow LH behavioral profile was negatively and positively associated with externalizing behavior and academic performance, respectively, as measured an additional 2 years later. These results support the evolutionary conception that human development responds to environmental safety cues through LH regulation of social and learning behaviors. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • physical activity
  • endothelial cells
  • mental health
  • gene expression
  • cross sectional
  • high intensity
  • living cells
  • life cycle
  • adverse drug
  • sleep quality
  • medical students