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Dive into the research topics where Peter T. Ellison is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter T. Ellison.


The Lancet | 2009

Towards a new developmental synthesis: adaptive developmental plasticity and human disease

Peter D. Gluckman; Mark A. Hanson; Patrick Bateson; Alan S. Beedle; Catherine Law; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; K. V. Anokhin; Pierre Bougnères; Giriraj R. Chandak; Partha Dasgupta; George Davey Smith; Peter T. Ellison; Terrence Forrester; Scott F. Gilbert; Eva Jablonka; Hillard Kaplan; Andrew M. Prentice; Stephen J. Simpson; Ricardo Uauy; Mary Jane West-Eberhard

1focusing mainly on short-term outcomes such as infant survival and stunting. 2 However, the longer term eff ects on adult health 3 of a poor start to life suggest a further perspective. Developmental eff ects have been viewed traditionally in the context of major disruptions such as caused by teratogens, prematurity and growth retardation, but there is increasing appreciation of the role of developmental plasticity, which provides individuals with the fl exibility to adjust their trajectory of development to match their environment. Plasticity operates across the entire range of environment, from undernutrition to excessive nutritional environments associated with gestational diabetes or maternal obesity, 4,5


Proceedings - Royal Society of London. Biological sciences | 2004

Large breasts and narrow waists indicate high reproductive potential in women

Grazyna Jasienska; Anna Ziomkiewicz; Peter T. Ellison; Susan F. Lipson; Inger Thune

Physical characteristics, such as breast size and waist–to–hip ratio (WHR), function as important features used by human males to assess female attractiveness. Males supposedly pay attention to these features because they serve as cues to fecundity and health. Here, we document that women with higher breast–to–underbreast ratio (large breasts) and women with relatively low WHR (narrow waists) have higher fecundity as assessed by precise measurements of daily levels of 17–β–oestradiol (E2) and progesterone. Furthermore, women who are characterized by both narrow waists and large breasts have 26% higher mean E2 and 37% higher mean mid–cycle E2 levels than women from three groups with other combinations of body–shape variables, i.e. low WHR with small breasts and high WHR with either large or small breasts. Such gains in hormone levels among the preferred mates may lead to a substantial rise in the probability of conception, thus providing a significant fitness benefit.


Hormones and Behavior | 2003

Men in committed, romantic relationships have lower testosterone.

Terence C. Burnham; J.Flynn Chapman; Peter B. Gray; Matthew H. McIntyre; Susan F. Lipson; Peter T. Ellison

Variation in human male testosterone levels may reflect, and effect, differential behavioral allocation to mating and parenting effort. This proposition leads to the hypothesis that, among North American men, those involved in committed, romantic relationships will have lower testosterone levels than men not involved in such relationships. Our study is the first to examine whether being in such a relationship (rather than being married) is the meaningful predictor of male testosterone levels. To test this hypothesis, 122 male Harvard Business School students filled out a questionnaire and collected one saliva sample (from which testosterone level was measured). Results revealed that men in committed, romantic relationships had 21% lower testosterone levels than men not involved in such relationships. Furthermore, the testosterone levels of married men and unmarried men who were involved in committed, romantic relationships did not differ, suggesting that, at least for this sample, male pair bonding status is the more significant predictor of testosterone levels than is marital status.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2005

The development of sex differences in digital formula from infancy in the Fels Longitudinal Study

Matthew H. McIntyre; Peter T. Ellison; Daniel E. Lieberman; Ellen W. Demerath; Bradford Towne

Relative finger lengths, especially the second-to-fourth finger length ratio, have been proposed as useful markers for prenatal testosterone action. This claim partly depends on an association of relative finger lengths in adults with related sex differences in children and infants. This paper reports the results of a study using serial radiographs to test for both sex differences in the fingers of infants and children and for a relationship between sex differences in the children and infant finger and adult finger length ratios. This is the first study using long-term serial data to evaluate the validity of finger length ratios as markers. We found not only that sex differences in finger length ratios arise prior to puberty, but that sex differences in the fingers of children are highly correlated with adult finger length ratios. Our results strongly encourage the further use of finger length ratios as markers of perinatal testosterone action.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1986

Moderate recreational running is associated with lowered salivary progesterone profiles in women.

Peter T. Ellison; Catherine Lager

Salivary progesterone profiles were studied in a group of recreational women runners (average 12.5 miles per week) and nonexercising control subjects. Although no differences were observed in the average cycle lengths of the two groups, luteal progesterone levels, both peak and average, were found to be significantly lower in the runners. A salivary progesterone level two standard deviations above the follicular phase average was used to discriminate luteal activity with 95% confidence. Runners averaged fewer days with sample values two standard deviations above this level and a shorter average interval between first and last samples observed above this level. However, no evidence was found of a delayed luteal progesterone rise among the runners. These results suggest that even moderate amounts of aerobic exercise may have effects on female reproductive function which would not be suspected from menstrual patterns alone.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Metabolic hypothesis for human altriciality

Holly M. Dunsworth; Anna G. Warrener; Terrence W. Deacon; Peter T. Ellison; Herman Pontzer

The classic anthropological hypothesis known as the “obstetrical dilemma” is a well-known explanation for human altriciality, a condition that has significant implications for human social and behavioral evolution. The hypothesis holds that antagonistic selection for a large neonatal brain and a narrow, bipedal-adapted birth canal poses a problem for childbirth; the hominin “solution” is to truncate gestation, resulting in an altricial neonate. This explanation for human altriciality based on pelvic constraints persists despite data linking human life history to that of other species. Here, we present evidence that challenges the importance of pelvic morphology and mechanics in the evolution of human gestation and altriciality. Instead, our analyses suggest that limits to maternal metabolism are the primary constraints on human gestation length and fetal growth. Although pelvic remodeling and encephalization during hominin evolution contributed to the present parturitional difficulty, there is little evidence that pelvic constraints have altered the timing of birth.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Evolution in health and medicine Sackler colloquium: Making evolutionary biology a basic science for medicine.

Randolph M. Nesse; Carl T. Bergstrom; Peter T. Ellison; Jeffrey S. Flier; Peter D. Gluckman; Diddahally R. Govindaraju; Dietrich Niethammer; Gilbert S. Omenn; Robert L. Perlman; Schwartz; Mark G. Thomas; Stephen C. Stearns; David Valle

New applications of evolutionary biology in medicine are being discovered at an accelerating rate, but few physicians have sufficient educational background to use them fully. This article summarizes suggestions from several groups that have considered how evolutionary biology can be useful in medicine, what physicians should learn about it, and when and how they should learn it. Our general conclusion is that evolutionary biology is a crucial basic science for medicine. In addition to looking at established evolutionary methods and topics, such as population genetics and pathogen evolution, we highlight questions about why natural selection leaves bodies vulnerable to disease. Knowledge about evolution provides physicians with an integrative framework that links otherwise disparate bits of knowledge. It replaces the prevalent view of bodies as machines with a biological view of bodies shaped by evolutionary processes. Like other basic sciences, evolutionary biology needs to be taught both before and during medical school. Most introductory biology courses are insufficient to establish competency in evolutionary biology. Premedical students need evolution courses, possibly ones that emphasize medically relevant aspects. In medical school, evolutionary biology should be taught as one of the basic medical sciences. This will require a course that reviews basic principles and specific medical applications, followed by an integrated presentation of evolutionary aspects that apply to each disease and organ system. Evolutionary biology is not just another topic vying for inclusion in the curriculum; it is an essential foundation for a biological understanding of health and disease.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2009

Testosterone and paternal care in East African foragers and pastoralists

Martin N. Muller; Frank W. Marlowe; Revocatus Bugumba; Peter T. Ellison

The ‘challenge hypothesis’ posits that testosterone facilitates reproductive effort (investment in male–male competition and mate-seeking) at the expense of parenting effort (investment in offspring and mates). Multiple studies, primarily in North America, have shown that men in committed relationships, fathers, or both maintain lower levels of testosterone than unpaired men. Data from non-western populations, however, show inconsistent results. We hypothesized that much of this cross-cultural variation can be attributed to differential investment in mating versus parenting effort, even among married fathers. Here, we directly test this idea by comparing two neighbouring Tanzanian groups that exhibit divergent styles of paternal involvement: Hadza foragers and Datoga pastoralists. We predicted that high levels of paternal care by Hadza fathers would be associated with decreased testosterone in comparison with non-fathers, and that no such difference between fathers and non-fathers would be evident in Datoga men, who provide minimal direct paternal care. Twenty-seven Hadza men and 80 Datoga men between the ages of 17 and 60 provided morning and afternoon saliva samples from which testosterone was assayed. Measurements in both populations confirmed these predictions, adding further support to the hypothesis that paternal care is associated with decreased testosterone production in men.


Neuropsychologia | 2004

The relationship of male testosterone to components of mental rotation

Carole K. Hooven; Christopher F. Chabris; Peter T. Ellison; Stephen M. Kosslyn

Studies suggest that higher levels of testosterone (T) in males contribute to their advantage over females in tests of spatial ability. However, the mechanisms that underlie the effects of T on spatial ability are not understood. We investigated the relationship of salivary T in men to performance on a computerized version of the mental rotation task (MRT) developed by [Science 171 (3972) (1971) 701]. We studied whether T is associated specifically with the ability to mentally rotate objects or with other aspects of the task. We collected hormonal and cognitive data from 27 college-age men on 2 days of testing. Subjects evaluated whether two block objects presented at different orientations were the same or different. We recorded each subjects mean response time (RT) and error rate (ER) and computed the slopes and intercepts of the functions relating performance to angular disparity. T level was negatively correlated with ER and RT; these effects arose from correlations with the intercepts but not the slopes of the rotation functions. These results suggest that T may facilitate male performance on MRTs by affecting cognitive processes unrelated to changing the orientation of imagined objects; including encoding stimuli, initiating the transformation processes, making a comparison and decision, or producing a response.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 1998

Physical work causes suppression of ovarian function in women

G Jasieńska; Peter T. Ellison

The suppression of reproductive function is known to occur in women engaging in activities that require high energetic expenses, such as sport participation and subsistence work. It is still unclear, however, if reproductive suppression is a response to high levels of energy expenditure, or only to the resulting state of negative energy balance. To our knowledge, this study provides the first evidence that work–related energy expenditure alone, without associated negative energy balance, can lead to the suppression of reproductive function in women. We document suppression of ovarian function expressed as lowered salivary progesterone levels in women from an agricultural community who work hard, but remain in neutral energy balance. We propose two alternative evolutionary explanations (the ‘pre–emptive ovarian suppression’ hypothesis and the ‘constrained down–regulation’ hypothesis) for the observed results.

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Inger Thune

Research Council of Norway

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Grazyna Jasienska

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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Anne-Sofie Furberg

University Hospital of North Norway

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Anna Ziomkiewicz

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Anne McTiernan

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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