Filters: Author is Nepomnaschy, P.A. [Clear All Filters]
Does “The Extrinsic Risk Hypothesis” explain cross-cultural variation in age at introduction of transitional foods? Eighty-First Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology.
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2012.
EVOLUCIÓN, DESARROLLO Y SALUD. UNA HISTORIA DE LIMITACIONES, DISYUNTIVAS Y COMPROMISOS. Introducción a la Antropología Biológica. :649.
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2016.
Eating for two: Maternal ecology and nutrition in human and non-human primates. Invited podium symposium organized by Kathryn Clancy and Julienne Rutherford at the Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology.
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2011.
Today is the tomorrow we worried about yesterday: Changes in stress axis function across women's reproductive transitions. Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropology.
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2012.
Methodologic considerations for assessing physiologic stress in women. Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association of Physical Anthropologists.
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2012.
Evolutionary endocrinology: Integrating proximate mechanisms, ontogeny, and evolved function. American Journal of Human Biology. 21(6):728-730.
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2009.
Between- and within-individual variability in first morning urinary cortisol in pre-pubertal children: Potential explanatory variables. Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Conference.
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2013.
A longitudinal evaluation of the relationship between first morning urinary and salivary cortisol. American Journal of Human Biology. 25:351-358.
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2013.
Mothers’ peri-conceptional cortisol levels and their children’s postnatal stress reactivity. Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Conference.
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2013.