BASES PSICOBIOLÓGICAS DE LA CORRESPONSABILIDAD PATERNA

dc.coverageDOI: 10.1016/j.rmclc.2021.11.001
dc.creatorVillalón, Hernán
dc.creatorWerner, Camila
dc.creatorDecombe, Camila
dc.creatorTuma, Daniela
dc.creatorRybertt, Freddie
dc.creatorSilva, Cristián
dc.date2021
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-18T19:56:23Z
dc.date.available2025-11-18T19:56:23Z
dc.description<p>Fathering since early stages, has been decisive in our species phylogeny, considering one of the most important adaptation in the evolutionary path separation with the rest of primates, neoteny. This allowed high brain development, but poorly autonomous newborns, highly dependent on their parents, which is known as “altricial development”. This is a known model in birds, with fathering about 90%, but very low in mammals (10%). The aim of this review is to search for evidence about the existence of neuroendocrine conditioning of this ancestrally inherited behavior in human fathers. Evidence based on neurosciences in human, animal and paleoanthropological studies, suggests that the acquisition of this behavior in the phylogeny of our species was decisive in the survival up to the present time.</p>eng
dc.identifierhttps://investigadores.uandes.cl/en/publications/f2a7f60b-e07f-438d-80e7-634beb7a9433
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.uandes.cl/handle/uandes/59777
dc.languageeng
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.sourcevol.32 (2021) date: 2021-11-01 nr.6 p.707-713
dc.subjectEndocrine
dc.subjectFathering
dc.subjectHuman Evolution
dc.subjectNeuroendocrine
dc.subjectNeurological
dc.subjectParenting
dc.subjectPsychobiological
dc.subjectSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
dc.titleBASES PSICOBIOLÓGICAS DE LA CORRESPONSABILIDAD PATERNAspa
dc.titlePSYCHOBIOLOGICAL BASIS OF FATHERINGeng
dc.typeReview articleeng
dc.typeArtículo de revisiónspa
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