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1 onstruction (i.e., individuals modifying the social environment).
2 this may include selective pressure from the social environment.
3 y of healthy foods, walking environment, and social environment.
4 escue of pth2 levels that was induced by the social environment.
5 zing Gods in a complex and heavily regulated social environment.
6 the interdependency of testosterone with the social environment.
7 ticity adaptive to the individual's specific social environment.
8  behaviors as we interact with others in our social environment.
9 nefits via participation in a well-organized social environment.
10 as adolescents navigate the changes in their social environment.
11 ing a sensitive period for adapting to one's social environment.
12 f life and how they relate to navigating the social environment.
13 me, cell type-specific, and modulated by the social environment.
14 ders, and encompass the individual and their social environment.
15 erve and promote emotional well being in the social environment.
16 a result of its being born into an intensely social environment.
17 h behavior is influenced by heredity and the social environment.
18 at do not recover with reintroduction into a social environment.
19 ness motivation that flexibly adapted to the social environment.
20 challenge of learning the structure of their social environment.
21 different forms, depending on input from the social environment.
22 and aid understanding and learning about the social environment.
23 nd physiological phenotypes depending on the social environment.
24 tions vary according to gender, genotype and social environment.
25  ovariole numbers that were sensitive to the social environment.
26  of interplay between prenatal adversity and social environment.
27 in response to changes in their physical and social environment.
28 uisite skill that enables us to navigate our social environment.
29 mune system, causing loss of interest in the social environment.
30 s essential for successful interactions in a social environment.
31 gnition is in its close interaction with the social environment.
32 ed with differences in both the physical and social environment.
33 s the ability to respond contingently to the social environment.
34 use it exploited aspects of the physical and social environment.
35 as males alter their status depending on the social environment.
36 E modulates the biobehavioral effects of the social environment.
37 ogy trends, and changes in the political and social environment.
38 enness to change, and a drive to reshape the social environment.
39 genetic make-up of peers in the individual's social environment.
40 personality is complex and contingent on the social environment.
41 ensified academic demands and changes in the social environment.
42 roduced the public good of a safe and stable social environment.
43  susceptible to the influences of a person's social environment.
44 l as indirectly, by influencing the external social environment.
45 ved to a dramatically different physical and social environment.
46 ip history versus the extrinsic physical and social environment.
47 e relative importance of the early childhood social environment.
48 al and span from the individual level to the social environment.
49 y to particularly relevant cues in the early social environment.
50 the brain has an inherent sensitivity to the social environment.
51  clique graphs are highly cooperative across social environments.
52 s is expanding despite challenging legal and social environments.
53 chanisms represent adaptations for different social environments.
54 ltaneously address the roles of genetics and social environments.
55  is an essential aspect of living in complex social environments.
56 a for interpreting the civilian physical and social environments.
57 en people and animals learn about visual and social environments.
58 lay a substantial role in creating their own social environments.
59 of animals within their natural physical and social environments.
60 ference process for human decision-making in social environments.
61 struggle to replicate the effects of dynamic social environments.
62 s repeatedly entered neutral virtual reality social environments.
63  have fast life histories and live in simple social environments.
64 overty but of intimately shared physical and social environments.
65  from and adapt to their constantly evolving social environments.
66 increase control over their more threatening social environments.
67 notypes are expected to experience different social environments.
68  factors and factors related to the person's social environment, a set reflecting demographic variabl
69 andomized experiments by intervening in live social environments across the domains of funding, statu
70 m current practices; namely, address harmful social environments across the life course, particularly
71 ven if the precise phenotype and measures of social environment adversity varied among studies.
72 tunement (ie, the need to harmonise with the social environment), affective processing, and brain pla
73 ase sleep both after exposure to an enriched social environment and after protocols that induce long-
74  importance of screening for deficits in the social environment and consideration of support activiti
75 wing an animal to integrate into a malleable social environment and engage in complex social behavior
76 ies aimed at exploring relationships between social environment and gene expression in this non-model
77                                         Both social environment and genetic factors are critical for
78 ccess, we repeatedly measured the behaviour, social environment and mating success of about 300 male
79  In this Review, we examine the roles of the social environment and neurocognitive development in ado
80 stematically vary the characteristics of the social environment and show that, depending on prenatal
81 atively breeding cichlid fish by varying the social environment and simulated predation threat in a t
82 We discuss the importance of considering the social environment and social rewards in research on ado
83         The correlation depended on a shared social environment and was most prominent in high freque
84 sociations between neighborhood physical and social environments and body mass index in 2,865 partici
85                                     Decoding social environments and engaging meaningfully with other
86          Cognitive abilities can shape these social environments and in turn, affect individuals' fit
87 ationships between neighborhood physical and social environments and incidence of hypertension in a c
88                Humans live in highly complex social environments and some of our most important decis
89 he shortest TL when exposed to disadvantaged social environments and the longest TL when exposed to a
90 eneral framework for studying the nesting of social environments and the multiple pathways by which e
91   We analysed outcomes across mental health, social environment, and health-related domains in sexual
92 ulnerable, with little control over home and social environment, and lack the understanding, agency,
93 new technology to evaluate both physical and social environment, and modern methods of data collectio
94 ical) factors, the physical environment, the social environment, and service delivery.
95 ation (NSA), causing loss of interest in the social environment, and that recovery from hypoxia-induc
96 roid levels are responsive to changes in the social environment, and that their concentrations vary i
97 urvival on their ability to understand their social environment, and their behavior is often shaped b
98 individual behaviour scales up to define the social environment, and this environment, in turn, feeds
99 bout how people learn to adjust to different social environments, and how this behaviour emerges acro
100 kely to have mental health problems, adverse social environments, and negative health outcomes compar
101 s, how it operates, and what features of the social environment are conducive to its emergence.
102 ugh both genetic factors and features of the social environment are important predictors of posttraum
103                                Disadvantaged social environments are associated with adverse health o
104 es" such as circadian cycles, husbandry, and social environments are often omitted in methods section
105 rudent social decision-making, at least when social environments are relatively stable.
106 re generalist obligate parasites whose early social environments are unpredictable regarding host spe
107   We also examine the moderating role of the social environment as defined by parent report and obser
108 ce and allocation of funding that the modern social environment ascribes to its own history.
109 ddressing risk and protective factors in the social environment at a population level, and focusing o
110  Here we investigate the implications of the social environment before and during breeding on multipl
111                                          The social environment, both in early life and adulthood, is
112 ll suited to understanding change in complex social environments, but guidance on applying a complex
113  importance of expanding theories of how the social environment can affect childhood asthma to includ
114  brain gene expression data, an individual's social environment can be more accurately predicted than
115 mals, since the genotypic composition of the social environment can either rescue or promote phenotyp
116                               The early-life social environment can induce stable changes that influe
117                                 Variation in social environment can mitigate risks and rewards associ
118          The present study demonstrates that social environment can slow, as well as accelerate, the
119 isciplines has demonstrated how individuals' social environments can impact their health, lifespan, r
120 ong may be strongly influenced by changes in social environment caused by habitat fragmentation.
121      When each component of the neighborhood social environment characteristics score was examined se
122  this cooperative elite is more prevalent in social environments characterized by a large payoff diff
123                     When genotypes differ in social environment-constructing behaviors, different gen
124 monstrating that these behaviors function as social environment-constructing traits.
125 ses in psychology, that genetic variation in social environment construction has a causal role in beh
126 y theories predict that genetic variation in social environment construction should have an important
127            I identify multiple mechanisms of social environment construction that differ among natura
128 f social experience-as determined in part by social environment construction-carried over to affect f
129 or between an individual's phenotype and its social environment (context dependence) can select for i
130 tched infants raised in a semi-naturalistic, social environment (CONTROL, n=11).
131 The authors examined whether features of the social environment (county-level crime rate and unemploy
132 esponse to changing environments, especially social environments created by other individuals with wh
133 ever before have individuals had to adapt to social environments defined by such magnitudes of ethnic
134                                  In everyday social environments, demands on attentional resources dy
135 rmed that preconception stress, not maternal social environment, determined offspring behavioral phen
136 show that different genotypes respond to the social environment differentially and that interaction e
137 acities develop to aid the navigation of the social environment during adolescence.
138 ges that may help an individual navigate the social environment during times of sickness.
139 verall disease burden, and the ways in which social environments, especially conditions of social ine
140 ificantly higher in neighborhoods with a low social environment, even after account was taken of indi
141 actions of an individual, in addition to the social environment experienced by previous generations.
142                                 A permissive social environment for object play may be key to the dev
143 imate amygdala in a controlled, naturalistic social environment from birth to adulthood.
144 stigate how the genotypic composition of the social environment (G(s)) interacts with the oxytocin ge
145 o forage precociously because of a change in social environment had levels similar to normal age fora
146           In the absence of ischemic damage, social environment had no significant effect on the expr
147                    However, we know that the social environment has a dramatic impact on our sense of
148                   These results suggest that social environment has a strong influence on breeding sy
149                However, for many species the social environment has an equally important role because
150 daptive phenotypic plasticity in response to social environment has been observed in protozoan parasi
151                                          The social environment has potent effects on individual phen
152  competitive mating assay, males reared in a social environment have a marked advantage in courting f
153 le, physical fitness, medical condition, and social environment have emerged as relevant disease modi
154                                              Social environments have an important effect on a range
155 between momentary feeling of loneliness, the social environment (i.e. overcrowding, social inclusivit
156 l behavior consistently demonstrate that the social environment impacts cooperation, yet the effect o
157      These results emphasize the role of the social environment in determining the microbiota of adul
158 e findings demonstrate the importance of the social environment in early moral development, supportin
159 ls mature, they increasingly shape their own social environment in large part as a result of their ge
160 l hierarchy status, a major component of the social environment in mice, and whether it influences be
161 he feasibility of studying the impact of the social environment in peripheral T-cell DNA methylation.
162  shown to vary in relation to changes in the social environment in several vertebrates including fish
163 stem and (2) the richness of the sensory and social environment in which the plasticity is studied.
164                                      Adverse social environments in early life are hypothesized to be
165 matic differences in experience in different social environments in society lead to systematically di
166 that follow, including the many physical and social environments in which an animal may find itself.
167 tively involved with their peers and live in social environments in which the perceived use of drugs
168 dapting their leader-follower roles to their social environments, in both cooperation and coordinatio
169 environment with the complexity of the human social environment, including histories, cultures, and v
170  have significant behavioral consequences in social environments, including families, courts, compani
171 cts (IGEs) that occur when different sibling social environments induce the expression of more cooper
172                Lifetime exposures to adverse social environments influence adult health, as do exposu
173                                              Social environments influence important ecological proce
174 o the sex of adult conspecifics and that the social environment influences CART expression in the pra
175 hosocial model where biology, psychology and social environment interact.
176 er (PTSD), there are few data examining gene-social environment interactions in studies of PTSD.
177 Most studies of human molecular genetics and social environment interactions on health have relied he
178 ocus on and understand one talker in a noisy social environment is a critical social-cognitive capaci
179                             Variation in the social environment is a fundamental component of many ve
180                                          The social environment is a key factor determining fitness b
181                 Successful navigation of the social environment is dependent on a number of social co
182 f so, how this might happen and what type of social environment is required.
183            Learning to successfully navigate social environments is a critical developmental goal, pr
184 s associated with awkward working positions, social environment issues (additional tasks and distract
185                  To interact successfully in social environments, it is also essential to monitor the
186 lth that are not compensated for by a normal social environment later in life.
187  facing any effort to communicate science in social environments: lay publics with varying levels of
188                                           In social environments, learning is often guided by similar
189 males were more aggressive and sampled their social environment less than HL males, but HL and LL fem
190 evel and poorly understood, but the school's social environment likely plays an important role.
191         Given that we live in highly complex social environments, many of our most important decision
192                                          The social environment may influence cognitive function in a
193 etic ancestry, mediating pathways related to social environments may be more important for survival i
194 ter birth, and differences in infants' early social environment, may predict a later social skill.
195 y mass index was higher in areas with better social environments (mean difference = 0.52 (95% CI: 0.0
196 y all organisms compete with others in their social environment, mechanisms that reduce conflict betw
197                                     In these social environments, microbes compete and cooperate for
198 ertension, prediabetes and components of the social environment might play important roles in the dev
199                   These results suggest that social environment modifies the effect of 5-HTTLPR genot
200                                              Social environment modulates learning through unknown me
201 on experienced by ants living in alternative social "environments" (monogyne and polygyne) may have c
202                                           In social environments, multiple sensory channels are simul
203 volutionary analyses of traits influenced by social environments must incorporate the genetic compone
204 isk of death was higher for residents in low social environment neighborhoods (odds ratio = 1.58, 95%
205  responding to the population density of the social environment of an animal.
206                          Here, we assess the social environment of archaeology and climate change and
207      Genetic change in response to the novel social environment of contemporary modern societies is a
208 ymmetries, we systematically manipulated the social environment of Drosophila melanogaster, testing i
209 e is one important pathway through which the social environment of neighborhoods affects population h
210 to separate the effects of genetics from the social environment of rearing, and twin studies can ofte
211                             The physical and social environment of the hospital positioned many older
212 re well adapted to the level of maturity and social environment of young people, few interventions ta
213  individual behaviours of worker bees in the social environments of small observation hives.
214        In humans and other primates, adverse social environments often translate into lasting physiol
215  examined the effect of overall neighborhood social environment on 11-year risk of death.
216 sion, demonstrating a specific effect of the social environment on brain function.
217 omestication rather than to the influence of social environment on ontogeny.
218 uscitation (CA/CPR) to examine the effect of social environment on several pathophysiological and beh
219 tive ontogeny and the impact of the proximal social environment on the early development of communica
220 s may mediate or moderate the effects of the social environment on the emergence of mental illness.
221  The present study examines the influence of social environment on the progression of atherosclerosis
222 tration in women moderates the effect of the social environment on trust.
223 se and create them, through a process called social environment (or social niche) construction.
224               In addition, infants with rich social environments outperformed infants with less socia
225 ically quantify behavior in naturalistic and social environments over long timescales in the lab.
226 s factors that reciprocally influence future social environments over time in ways that are important
227                               In competitive social environments, people often deviate from what rati
228 the genetic endowment, physical environment, social environment, population and individual responses
229 ospital experiences: hospital's physical and social environment positions older ppl as insignificant
230 ivation toward adherence, and factors in the social environment potentially influencing dietary behav
231 dditionally, we find that changes in cities' social environments precede changes in implicit biases a
232         Exposure to ethnic groups in raters' social environment predicted trustworthiness ratings of
233                 These data indicate that the social environment profoundly affects the DA system but
234 ental manipulation of mutation rates via the social environment raises the possibility that such mani
235 choices that mirror behavior observed in the social environment), rather than cooperative decisions p
236    In a life span study, we examined how the social environment regulates naturally occurring tumor d
237                                        Adult social environments represent one candidate: Early life
238 nding the lasting consequences of early-life social environments requires detailed, long-term dataset
239  Social animals live in complex physical and social environments requiring them to attend and rapidly
240                        Consideration of this social environment reveals behaviors and phenotypes that
241 luation of dog vocalizations with respect to social environment reveals developmental factors that le
242 cial groups and while alone to determine the social environment's influence on behavioural plasticity
243 ors developed a three-component neighborhood social environment scale: 1) commercial stores; 2) popul
244                             The neighborhood social environment score combined measures of greater ae
245 rch on choice emphasizes how features of the social environment shape individual behavior, not people
246                      These attributes of the social environment shape lifestyle choices that signific
247 tiveness of one's interaction partners (the "social environment") should affect the speed of cooperat
248 ese effects can be mediated by the postnatal social environment ('social buffering').
249  OXTR rs53576 is sensitive to input from the social environment, specifically cultural norms regardin
250                 Using data from the New York Social Environment Study (n = 4,000) conducted in 2005,
251 ses were conducted on data from the New York Social Environment Study (n = 4,000), a representative s
252                  By contrast, the family and social environment substantially influences risk of ever
253 o Santiago, Puerto Rico, we analysed how the social environment such as maternal family, group and po
254                                     Changing social environments such as the birth of young or aggres
255 rated by the physical characteristics of the social environments such as the built environment and po
256 he prevalence of rule violations in people's social environment, such as corruption, tax evasion or p
257   In the latter, genes affect aspects of the social environment, such as exposure to stressful life e
258  relationships across different physical and social environments suggests that social structure is ca
259 n individuals exist in their response to the social environment that affect their future development.
260 sts and physicians were intertwined with the social environment that created classifications and hier
261                     Newborns are born into a social environment that dynamically responds to them.
262 n early age, individuals are surrounded by a social environment that helps them develop a variety of
263 epidemic can be attributed to changes in the social environment that hinder healthful lifestyle habit
264 t aggressive behavior or who are raised in a social environment that is conducive to the development
265                               The changes in social environment that occur during adolescence might i
266 een an individual's cognitive abilities, the social environment that they inhabit and the fitness con
267 ligence may have more to do with the child's social environment that with the nutritional qualities o
268 escents, and young adults learn to adjust to social environments that differ in their level of cooper
269 hese biologically prepared minds interact in social environments that include significant variation,
270     We describe how uncertainty manifests in social environments (the thoughts and intentions of othe
271 s that set the stage for the conference: the social environment, the food environment, nutrition scie
272  in each stage according to the physical and social environment, their own condition, their future re
273 offspring both contribute and respond to the social environment they experience.
274  Individuals are not merely subject to their social environments; they choose and create them, throug
275 perceptual challenges in cocktail-party-like social environments, this article reviews previous psych
276 litates attachment and bonding in supportive social environments, this attunement for social cues may
277 acks has suggested a paradoxical role of the social environment: those who arrive early are surrounde
278  is the study of interactions of natural and social environments through time and across space.
279  in response to stressors and changes in the social environment, thus altering the communication valu
280  effects, from maladaptive influences on the social environment to direct amplification of the centra
281 ese findings highlight the importance of the social environment to health and mortality as well as Da
282 Cassel's 1976 paper "The Contribution of the Social Environment to Host Resistance" is widely regarde
283  key role for gene regulation in linking the social environment to individual physiology.
284  identify genetic factors that interact with social environments to impact human health, we used a bi
285 s in song across tutoring generations in two social environments: tutor-pupil pairs in sound-isolated
286                              A walk-friendly social environment was associated with walking for trave
287                                              Social environment was characterized based on the gross
288                                   An adverse social environment was conceptualized as low socioeconom
289 rding emotional support seeking as a type of social environment, we explored the behavioral expressio
290 ution can determine individuals' spatial and social environment, we illustrate how key social relatio
291 novel contexts is better adapted to variable social environments where social partners may change the
292 ildren who were reared in extremely aberrant social environments where they were deprived of the kind
293                      Primates live in highly social environments, where prosocial behaviors promote s
294 ventions, such as changes to the physical or social environment, which could affect upstream (distal)
295 factors arising from the shared physical and social environment, which have effects beyond those of p
296                       On the other hand, the social environment, which is composed of conspecifics th
297 nt component of variation contributed by the social environment, which is hidden to ordinary genetic
298 ely long lives in highly complex and dynamic social environments, which suggests that they might also
299        Animals evaluate and respond to their social environment with adaptive decisions.
300 terplay between individual cognition and the social environment, with reasoners adopting a narrative

 
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