2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.2041-210x.2010.00087.x
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The pace and shape of ageing

Abstract: Summary 1. Humans age, but how much more or less do we age compared with other species? Do humans age more than chimps, birds more than fish or sheep more than buffalos? In this article, I argue that current methods to compare patterns of ageing across species are limited because they confound two dimensions of age‐specific change – the pace and the shape of ageing. 2. Based on the two axes of pace and shape, I introduce a new conceptual framework to classify how species age. 3. With this method, I rank spe… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(168 citation statements)
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“…Although the human life history has many unique features (30), our underlying biological potential for plasticity in mortality is likely to be shared with other taxa. That said, there are likely taxonomic differences in the shapes of mortality profiles (31), the age at lowest mortality, and the lowest mortality level (if any) that a species can achieve. Research is needed on identifying what those taxonomic signatures may be.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the human life history has many unique features (30), our underlying biological potential for plasticity in mortality is likely to be shared with other taxa. That said, there are likely taxonomic differences in the shapes of mortality profiles (31), the age at lowest mortality, and the lowest mortality level (if any) that a species can achieve. Research is needed on identifying what those taxonomic signatures may be.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the modeling approach used in this study could be complemented by models that combine longitudinal growth curve modeling with survival analyses to estimate the influence that level and change in the constructs of interest have on age at death (e.g., Ghisletta, McArdle, & Lindenberger, 2006). Finally, inspired by work in neighboring disciplines (e.g., Baudisch, 2011), it may be worthwhile to fit models of aging and mortality risk that are nonlinear in the parameters (e.g., exponential decline functions). More generally, articulating and testing multidimensional notions of late-life change will expand the theoretical framework from which terminal decline has been studied and provide an integrated picture of how and potential reasons why some individuals age more successfully than others (e.g., experience less decline prior to death).…”
Section: Limitations and Outlookmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More systematic statistical information can be found almost everywhere, for instance in the HMD (Human Mortality Database), which also happens to be the source of data for our analysis. However, the connection between longevity and physiological ageing is elusive and the two concepts are not synonymous (Baudisch, 2011;Baudisch and Vaupel, 2012). Biologists and gerontologists interpret ageing (or senescence) as the process by which molecular damage increases at the cellular level (Rattan, 2006;.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%