Frequent disturbances enhanced the resilience of past human populations
Nature • Vol/Iss. 629(8013) • Springer • • Published In • Pages: 837-842 •
By Riris, Philip, Silva, Fabio, Crema, Enrico, Palmisano, Alessio, Robinson, Erick, Siegel, Peter E., French, Jennifer C., Kirkeng Jørgensen, Erlend, Maezumi, Shira Yoshi, Solheim, Steinar, Bates, Jennifer, Davies, Benjamin, Oh, Yongie, Ren, Xiaolin
Hypothesis
The number of catastrophes experienced by a society in the past informs the extent to which the society's demography is impacted by catastrophes in the present, and the speed at which the society tends to recover.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bayesian models (various) | Supported | NA | NA | NA |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Population resistance (i.e. severity of downturns) | Dependent | Birth Statistics, Mortality, Population |
Population resilience (i.e. response to downturns) | Dependent | Birth Statistics, Mortality, Population |
Relative pace of societal recovery (i.e. speed of response to downturns) | Dependent | Birth Statistics, Mortality, Population |
Number of catastrophes experienced in the past | Independent | Disasters |