Dataset: Maya Children's Growth and Family Composition
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<p><strong><span style="background-color:rgb(247, 249, 244); font-size:12.8px; line-height:16.64px">Sibling competition and growth tradeoffs: Biological vs statistical significance (accepted PLOS ONE Feb 2016).</span></strong></p>
<p>Early childhood growth has many downstream effects on future health and reproduction and is an important measure of offspring quality. While a tradeoff between family size and child growth outcomes is theoretically predicted in high-fertility societies, empirical evidence is mixed.&nbsp; This is often attributed to phenotypic variation in parental condition.&nbsp; However, inconsistent study results may also arise because family size confounds the potentially differential effects that older and younger siblings can have on young children&rsquo;s growth. Additionally, inconsistent results might reflect that the biological significance associated with different growth trajectories is poorly understood. This paper addresses these concerns by tracking children&rsquo;s monthly gains in height and weight from weaning to age five in a high fertility Maya community.&nbsp; We predicted that: 1) as an aggregate measure family size will not have a major impact on child growth during the post weaning period; 2) competition from young siblings will negatively impact child growth during the post weaning period; 3) however because of their economic value, older siblings will have a negligible effect on young children&rsquo;s growth. Accounting for parental condition, we use linear mixed models to evaluate the effects that family size, younger and older siblings have on children&rsquo;s growth.&nbsp; Congruent with our expectations, it is younger siblings that have the most detrimental effect on children&rsquo;s growth.&nbsp; While we find statistical evidence of a quantity/quality tradeoff effect, the biological significance of these results is negligible in early childhood. Our findings help to resolve why quantity/quality studies have had inconsistent results by showing that sibling competition varies with sibling age composition, not just family size, and differs for children growing up in traditional and labor-market economies.&nbsp;</p>
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提供机构:
Purdue University Research Repository
创建时间:
2016-02-18



