File:Dan Lieberman at Ancestral Health Symposium.jpg

原始文件 (731 × 731像素,文件大小:169 KB,MIME类型:image/jpeg


摘要

描述
English: AHS12 Dan Leiberman — What Are Humans Adapted For?

Dan Leiberman, Ph.D., presenting at the Ancestral Health Symposium 2012 (AHS12)

What Are Humans Adapted For?

Abstract: How can we use information on human evolution and principles of evolutionary medicine to improve human health and wellbeing in a post-industrial world? This is a large and complex topic, but one central issue relevant to most hypotheses about ancestral health is the phenomenon of adaptation. It is widely acknowledged that the human body is adapted for conditions that were different from those experienced by many modern people, but what are adaptations, and how do we recognize them in different environmental contexts? Further, how do we reconcile trade-offs between multiple adaptations that affect human health in different ways?

In this talk, I will review the theory and practice of defining, identifying and testing adaptations, and review the evidence that many interacting adaptations can affect human fitness, often because of varying environmental conditions. As case study, I will consider the issue of physical inactivity, which is one of the most abnormal and pathological aspects of modern life. I will review evidence for how and why natural selection adapted the body to be physically active, and how physical activity has changed over the last six million years, including the agricultural, industrial and post-industrial eras. I will then consider how the body has different, competing adaptations relevant to physical activity (including a tendency to be inactive when possible) that contribute to a variety of common modern health problems. An evolutionary perspective not only helps us understand better how many of these illnesses arise, but also how to prevent and treat them differently.

Bio:

Daniel Lieberman is Chair and Professor of the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, where is also a member of Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology. He was educated at Harvard (AB '86, PhD '93) and Cambridge (M.Phil. '97). His research is on how and why the human body is the way it is, with particular foci on the origins of bipedalism, how humans became such superlative endurance runners, and the evolution of the highly unusual human head. To address these questions he combines experimental biomechanics and physiology, paleontology, and comparative anatomy. He teaches a variety of courses on human evolution, anatomy, and physiology. His most recent book is The Evolution of the Human Head (Harvard University Press, 2011).
日期
来源 AHS12 Dan Leiberman — What Are Humans Adapted For? at 0:18, cropped, brightened
作者 AncestryFoundation

许可协议

本影片、截图或音讯摘录曾以创用CC授权条款上传至YouTube
该网站声明如后:「YouTube使用者可替自己的影片加上创用CC的CC-BY授权标示。」
致上传者:您必须提供本档案原始来源的连结位址(URL),如有其作者资讯的话也应一并列明。
w:zh:知识共享
署名
本文件采用知识共享署名 3.0 未本地化版本许可协议授权。
您可以自由地:
  • 共享 – 复制、发行并传播本作品
  • 修改 – 改编作品
惟须遵守下列条件:
  • 署名 – 您必须对作品进行署名,提供授权条款的链接,并说明是否对原始内容进行了更改。您可以用任何合理的方式来署名,但不得以任何方式表明许可人认可您或您的使用。
本图片原先发表在一个外部站点上,但上述许可证未经管理员复查员确认有效。请于Category:License review needed寻找更多指导。

说明

添加一行文字以描述该文件所表现的内容

此文件中描述的项目

描繪內容

image/jpeg

0b1338c5a9396f8e99efa26ca3345fef50157ea2

172,730 字节

731 像素

731 像素

文件历史

点击某个日期/时间查看对应时刻的文件。

日期/时间缩⁠略⁠图大小用户备注
当前2022年3月26日 (六) 01:062022年3月26日 (六) 01:06版本的缩略图731 × 731(169 KB)GRuban{{Information |description={{en|1=AHS12 Dan Leiberman — What Are Humans Adapted For? Dan Leiberman, Ph.D., presenting at the Ancestral Health Symposium 2012 (AHS12) What Are Humans Adapted For? Abstract: How can we use information on human evolution and principles of evolutionary medicine to improve human health and wellbeing in a post-industrial world? This is a large and complex topic, but one central issue relevant to most hypotheses about ancestral health is the phenomenon of adaptatio...

以下页面使用本文件:

全域文件用途

以下其他wiki使用此文件: