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Psicothema. 2010 Feb;22(1):28-34.

Childhood experience and the development of reproductive strategies.

Psicothema

Jay Belsky

Affiliations

  1. Birkbeck University of London, United Kingdom. [email protected]

PMID: 20100424

Abstract

Even though a great deal of mainstream developmental psychology is devoted to understanding whether and how experiences in childhood shape psychological and behavioral development later in life, little theoretical attention has been paid to why such cross-time influences should characterize human development. This is especially true with respect to the well-studied determinants of mating, pair bonding and parenting. Theoretically, Draper and Harpending (1982), Belsky, Steinberg and Draper (1991), Ellis (2004) and Chisholm (1996) have all addressed this lacuna, stimulating research on linkages between childhood experience and reproductive strategy which is summarised herein. Concern for experiential effects on pubertal timing distinguishes this line of inquiry from more traditional developmental studies because an evolutionary perspective suggests that experiences in the family might affect somatic development. Twenty years since BSD advanced their <> prediction, it seems clear that female pubertal timing is related to select aspects of early family experience.

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