Marketing Department, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, 321 19th Avenue S., Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2011 Feb;100(2):241-54. doi: 10.1037/a0021082.
Why do some people have children early, whereas others delay reproduction? By considering the trade-offs between using one's resources for reproduction versus other tasks, the evolutionary framework of life history theory predicts that reproductive timing should be influenced by mortality and resource scarcity. A series of experiments examined how mortality cues influenced the desire to have children sooner rather than later. The effects of mortality depended critically on whether people grew up in a relatively resource-scarce or resource-plentiful environment. For individuals growing up relatively poor, mortality cues produced a desire to reproduce sooner--to want children now, even at the cost of furthering one's education or career. Conversely, for individuals growing up relatively wealthy, mortality cues produced a desire to delay reproduction--to further one's education or career before starting a family. Overall, mortality cues appear to shift individuals into different life history strategies as a function of childhood socioeconomic status, suggesting important implications for how environmental factors can influence fertility and family size.
为什么有些人早育,而有些人则延迟生育?通过考虑将资源用于繁殖与其他任务之间的权衡,生命史理论的进化框架预测,生殖时机应该受到死亡率和资源稀缺性的影响。一系列实验研究了死亡率线索如何影响人们更早而不是更晚生育的愿望。死亡率的影响取决于一个人是在资源相对稀缺还是资源丰富的环境中长大。对于在相对贫困环境中长大的个体,死亡率线索会产生更早生育的愿望——现在就想要孩子,即使这会影响到他们进一步接受教育或职业发展。相反,对于在相对富裕环境中长大的个体,死亡率线索会产生延迟生育的愿望——在组建家庭之前进一步接受教育或职业发展。总的来说,死亡率线索似乎根据童年时期的社会经济地位将个体转变为不同的生命史策略,这表明环境因素如何影响生育能力和家庭规模具有重要意义。