Abstract

Life history theory, a prominent ecological model in biology, is widely used in the human sciences to make predictions about human behaviour. However, its principal assumptions have not been empirically tested. We address this gap with three research questions: (1) do humans exhibit coherent life history strategies; (2) do individuals adopt strategies along a slow-fast continuum; and (3) are socioeconomic circumstances during childhood associated with the pace of the life history strategy that an individual adopts? Data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study is used to reconstruct the life histories of US women including information on puberty, fertility, menopause and death. We introduce a novel methodological approach to evolutionary anthropology, sequence analysis, to assess if human life histories are coherent strategies and how these strategies are patterned. In subsequent analyses we used multinomial logistic regressions to test whether childhood socioeconomic status predicts the life history patterns women follow. Results provide little evidence that humans follow coherent life-history strategies; Wisconsin women are clustered by the number of children they have but not by ages at life events. Socioeconomic status does not predict which cluster women fall into, suggesting that less well-off women do not have higher fertility, as predicted.

Highlights

  • Evolutionary anthropology and its associated disciplines have produced a large literature on human life history strategies

  • Borrowing a theoretical model from mainstream biology, human life history researchers apply the idea that humans take on life trajectories comprising a highly correlated suite of life events, the pace of which is dictated by ecological conditions, especially during early life

  • Our analysis revealed that women do cluster into groups, but that these are wholly defined by the numbers of children they had

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Summary

Introduction

Evolutionary anthropology and its associated disciplines have produced a large literature on human life history strategies. Borrowing a theoretical model from mainstream biology, human life history researchers apply the idea that humans take on life trajectories comprising a highly correlated suite of life events, the pace of which is dictated by ecological conditions, especially during early life. Individuals time their life events in predictable ways with unfavourable childhood conditions expected to produce a faster time to each life event – a so-called fast life history strategy. The driver of these diverging strategies is local mortality rates – harsh childhood conditions arguably indicate higher mortality risk, meaning that delaying reproduction might yield no genetic legacy at all (Chisholm, 1993; Promislow & Harvey, 1990, 1991)

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