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Social inequalities in health in non...
Shively, Carol A.

 

  • Social inequalities in health in nonhuman primates[electronic resource] :the biology of the gradient /
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
    杜威分類號: 599.815
    書名/作者: Social inequalities in health in nonhuman primates : the biology of the gradient // edited by Carol A. Shively, Mark E. Wilson.
    其他作者: Shively, Carol A.
    出版者: Cham : : Springer International Publishing :, 2016.
    面頁冊數: v, 178 p. : : ill. (some col.), digital ;; 24 cm.
    Contained By: Springer eBooks
    標題: Primates - Behavior.
    標題: Social hierarchy in animals.
    標題: Life Sciences.
    標題: Animal Physiology.
    標題: Social Structure, Social Inequality.
    標題: Human Physiology.
    標題: Health Psychology.
    標題: Neurobiology.
    ISBN: 9783319308722
    ISBN: 9783319308708
    內容註: Introduction: Relevance of NHP Translational Research to Understanding Social Inequalities in Health in Human Beings -- An Introduction to the Female Macaque Model of Social Subordination Stress -- Effects of Social Subordination on Macaque Neurobehavioral Outcomes: focus on Neurodevelopment -- The Effects of Social Experience on the Stress System and Immune Function in Non-Human Primates -- The Influence of Social Environment on Morbidity, Mortality, and Reproductive Success in Free-Ranging Cercopithecine Primates -- Social Status and the Non-human Primate Brain -- Emotional Eating in Socially Subordinate Female Rhesus Monkeys -- Dietary Modification of Physiological Responses to Chronic Psychosocial Stress: Implications for the Obesity Epidemic.
    摘要、提要註: This book provides a comprehensive look at nonhuman primate social inequalities as models for health differences associated with socioeconomic status in humans. The benefit of the socially-housed monkey model is that it provides the complexity of hierarchical structure and rank affiliation, i.e. both negative and positive aspects of social status. At the same time, nonhuman primates are more amenable to controlled experiments and more invasive studies that can be used in human beings to examine the effects of low status on brain development, neuroendocrine function, immunity, and eating behavior. Because all of these biological and behavioral substrates form the underpinnings of human illness, and are likely shared among primates, the nonhuman primate model can significantly advance our understanding of the best interventions in humans.
    電子資源: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30872-2
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