All Stories

  1. The effects of collection and storage conditions in the field on salivary testosterone, cortisol, and sIgA values
  2. Is early postnatal growth velocity, a proxy of minipubertal androgen action, related to adult second-to-fourth digit (2D:4D) ratios in men? A test in Cebu, Philippines
  3. Maternal pregnancy C-reactive protein predicts offspring birth size and body composition in metropolitan Cebu, Philippines
  4. Intergenerational Memories of Past Nutritional Deprivation: The Phenotypic Inertia Model
  5. Beyond genetic race: biocultural insights into the causes of racial health disparities
  6. Response to Agilli et al.
  7. Evolution and medicine. By Robert L. Perlman. xi + 162 pp. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2013. $98.50 (hardcover), $44.95 (paperback)
  8. How Can We Overcome the Biological Inertia of Past Deprivation? Anthropological Perspectives on the Developmental Origins of Adult Health
  9. Early Environments, Developmental Plasticity and Chronic Degenerative Disease
  10. Maternal cortisol disproportionately impacts fetal growth in male offspring: Evidence from the philippines
  11. Self-reported illness and birth weight in the Philippines: Implications for hypotheses of adaptive fetal plasticity
  12. Evolution, developmental plasticity, and metabolic disease
  13. Leptin in a lean population of Filipino adolescents
  14. Book reviews
  15. Allostasis, Homeostasis, and the Costs of Physiological Adaptation (review)
  16. The origins of the developmental origins hypothesis and the role of postnatal environments: Response to Koletzko
  17. Introduction
  18. Fetal origins of developmental plasticity: Are fetal cues reliable predictors of future nutritional environments?
  19. Prenatal smoke exposure alters growth in limb proportions and head shape in the midgestation human fetus
  20. Adipose tissue in human infancy and childhood: An evolutionary perspective
  21. Beyond Feast–Famine: Brain Evolution, Human Life History, and the Metabolic Syndrome
  22. Developmental Perspectives on the Origins of Obesity