Spatial working memory and planning abilities were assessed in 36 hospitalized patients with chronic schizophrenia, using the computerized Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB), and compared with those of normal subjects and patients with neurological disorders (frontal lobe lesions; temporal lobe and amygdalohippocampal lesions; Parkinson's disease), matched for age, sex and National Adult Reading Test IQ. The patients in the group with temporal lobe lesions were unimpaired in their performance on these tasks. Patients with schizophrenia were impaired on visuo-spatial memory span compared with all the other groups, while severity of Parkinson's disease was correlated with the degree of impairment on this task. The patients with schizophrenia and those with frontal lobe lesions were impaired on a 'spatial working memory' task, with increased 'between-search errors'. Patients with Parkinson's disease performed this task poorly compared with the younger control subjects. Patients with schizophrenia were unable to develop a systematic strategy to complete this task, relying instead on a limited visuo-spatial memory span. Higher level planning ability was investigated using the CANTAB 'Tower of London'. All groups were equally able to complete the task. However, the groups of patients with schizophrenia and frontal lobe lesions made fewer perfect solutions and required more moves for completion. Movement times were significantly slower in the schizophrenia group, suggesting impairment in the sensorimotor requirements of the task. The patients with schizophrenia were not impaired in their 'initial thinking' (planning) latencies, but had significantly prolonged 'subsequent thinking' (execution) latencies. This pattern resembled that of the group with frontal lobe lesions and contrasted with the prolonged 'initial thinking' time seen in Parkinson's disease. The results of this study are indicative of an overall deficit of executive functioning in schizophrenia, even greater than that seen in patients with frontal lobe lesions. However, the pattern of results in schizophrenia resembled that seen in patients with lesions of the frontal lobe or with basal ganglia dysfunction, providing support for the notion of a disturbance of frontostriatal circuits in schizophrenia. Our findings also indicate that there is a loss of the normal relationships between different domains of executive function in schizophrenia, with implications for impaired functional connectivity between different regions of the neocortex.
Immune function is a central component of maintenance effort, and it provides critical protection against the potentially life threatening effects of pathogens. However, immune defenses are energetically expensive, and the resources they consume are not available to support other activities related to growth and/or reproduction. In our study we use a life history theory framework to investigate tradeoffs between maintenance effort and growth among children in a remote area of Amazonian Bolivia. Baseline concentrations of C-reactive protein (CRP) were measured in 309 2- to 10-year olds as an indicator of immune activation, and height was measured at baseline and three months later. Elevated CRP at baseline predicts smaller gains in height over the subsequent three months, with the costs to growth particularly high for 2- to 4-year olds and for those with low energy reserves (in the form of body fat) at the time of immunostimulation. These results provide evidence for a significant tradeoff between investment in immunity and growth in humans, and highlight an important physiological mechanism through which maintenance effort may have lasting effects on child growth and development.
Culture is a critical determinant of human behavior and health, and the intergenerational transmission of knowledge regarding the use of available plant resources has historically been an essential function of culture. Local ethnobotanical knowledge is important for health and nutrition, particularly in rural low-resource settings, but cultural and economic transitions associated with globalization threaten such knowledge. This prospective study investigates the association between parental ethnobotanical knowledge and child health among the Tsimane', a horticulturalist and foraging society in Amazonian Bolivia. Anthropometric data and capillary blood samples were collected from 330 Tsimane' 2-to 10-year-olds, and mothers and fathers were interviewed to assess ethnobotanical knowledge and skills. Comprehensive measures of parental schooling, acculturation, and economic activities were also collected. Dependent variables included three measures of child health: (i) C-reactive protein, assayed in whole-blood spots as an indicator of immunostimulation; (ii) skinfold thickness, to estimate subcutaneous fat stores necessary to fuel growth and immune function; and (iii) height-for-age, to assess growth stunting. Each child health measure was associated with maternal ethnobotanical knowledge, independent of a wide range of potentially confounding variables. Each standard deviation of maternal ethnobotanical knowledge increased the likelihood of good child health by a factor of >1.5. Like many populations around the world, the Tsimane' are increasingly facing the challenges and opportunities of globalization. These results underscore the importance of local cultural factors to child health and document a potential cost if ethnobotanical knowledge is lost.acute-phase response ͉ culture ͉ growth and development ͉ maternal behavior ͉ child nutrition
This study examines patterns of growth and nutritional status of indigenous Tsimane' children under 9 years of age (n = 199 boys and 210 girls), based on a cross-sectional sample from 58 villages from the Beni Deparment of lowland Bolivia. Compared with US children, Tsimane' children are quite short, with linear growth tracking at or below the US 5th centile in both sexes. The prevalence of low height-for-age ("stunting;" HA Z-scores =-2) is 52% in boys and 43% in girls. In contrast, weight-for-height in Tsimane' children approximates the US median, with the prevalence of low weight-for-height ("wasting"; WH Z-scores =-2) being only 4% and 6% in boys and girls, respectively. Tsimane' boys and girls are leaner than their US peers, but their levels of body fatness are not so low as to indicate severe energy stress. Arm muscularity of Tsimane' children is similar to that of their US age peers, and this suggests that they are not experiencing acute protein malnutrition. Variation in measures of nutritional status of Tsimane' children is modestly correlated with village-level differences. Degree of isolation, as measured by distance to urban centers or to primary forest, was not a strong predictor of children's anthropometric status. Rather, in both boys and girls, nutritional status was most strongly associated with number of teachers in the village, a measure of access to education. Comparative analyses indicate that high levels of statural growth stunting are common among indigenous populations throughout lowland South America. This problem appears to be largely attributable to poor dietary quality (diets low in key micronutrients) and high disease loads. Further research is needed to identify the specific causes and potential interventions for the high rates of childhood growth stunting in this region.
We review 34 quantitative studies that have measured individuallevel variations in ethnobotanical knowledge, analyzing how those studies have conceptualized and operationalized ethnobotanical knowledge. We found that this type of research is recent but growing, and is concentrated in indigenous peoples of developing countries. We also found that studies differ on how they conceptualize and measure individual ethnobotanical knowledge. As it is the case in other interdisciplinary research, the lack of conceptual consistency and comparable data limit the inferences that can be drawn from empirical analyses of ethnobotanical knowledge. Future research should 1) validate the consistency of measures of individual ethnobotanical knowledge; 2) analyze the reliability of data generated by the different methods developed so far; and 3) address the relationship between the various dimensions of ethnobotanical knowledge. Studies of individual ethnobotanical knowledge have the potential to contribute to a systematic understanding of humanity's most widespread and ancient form of knowledge.
Over the last decades, native Amazonians have put increasing pressure on animal wildlife owing to growth in demand. Across societies, household monetary income and wealth shape food consumption; hence, so it is natural to ask what effect might these variables have on the demand for wildlife consumption among native Amazonians, particularly as they gain a stronger foothold in the market economy and increasing de jure stewardship over their territories. Prior estimates of the effects of household monetary income and household wealth on wildlife consumption among native Amazonians have relied on cross-sectional data and produced unclear results.
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