Hammel E A
Department of Demography, University of California, 2232 Piedmont Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94720-2120, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Feb 8;102(6):2248-53. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0409762102. Epub 2005 Jan 27.
Changes in fertility and mortality affect the size of surviving sibling sets and thus numbers of surviving kin. Because the genealogical generations specifying kinship relations are not temporal cohorts and most plausible demographic changes in anthropological populations are period shocks, the effect of such shocks on kin counts are complex. Shocks increasing fertility or decreasing mortality produce larger numbers of kin per ego and decrease the inequality of the distribution of kin and vice versa. Effects are more diffuse at more distant collateral ranges. Effects are stronger the more intense the shock and the longer its duration. Kinship distributions return to their initial state after the shock and as the original age structure of the population is ergodically reattained. Alternating shocks produce more complex patterns. Implications of these outcomes are that opportunities for political networking and consolidation by means of kinship are altered by demographic instabilities, as are the dynamics of kin selection. This analysis is limited for simplicity to unilineal agnatic reckoning of kin.
生育率和死亡率的变化会影响存活的兄弟姐妹群体的规模,进而影响存活亲属的数量。由于确定亲属关系的谱系代并非时间队列,且人类学群体中最合理的人口结构变化是时期冲击,因此此类冲击对亲属数量的影响较为复杂。生育率上升或死亡率下降的冲击会使每个自我拥有更多的亲属,并减少亲属分布的不平等,反之亦然。在更远的旁系范围内,影响更为分散。冲击越强烈、持续时间越长,影响就越强。亲属关系分布在冲击后会恢复到初始状态,并且随着人口的原始年龄结构被遍历性地重新获得。交替出现的冲击会产生更复杂的模式。这些结果的含义是,亲属关系在政治网络构建和巩固方面的机会会因人口结构不稳定而改变,亲属选择的动态变化也是如此。为简化起见,该分析仅限于对亲属关系进行单系父系计算。