TED Community ยป Rupert Van Vansetershermermermer

About Me

Location:
United States, Troy, NY


Comments

  • TEDCred score: +0.40 TEDCred reflects your contribution to the TED community.

  • A reply on Talk: Juan Enriquez: Will our kids be a different species?

    Jun 10 2012: Bingo.
  • A reply on Talk: Juan Enriquez: Will our kids be a different species?

    Jun 10 2012: Here, watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEaMtSLwkDs

    Human evolution has been accelerating since the agricultural revolution.
  • A reply on Talk: Ami Klin: A new way to diagnose autism

    Jun 10 2012: Oh you're fun.
  • +1

    A comment on Talk: Juan Enriquez: Will our kids be a different species?

    Jun 9 2012: Autism: The Eusocial Hominid Hypothesis

    ASDs (autism spectrum disorders) are hypothesized as one of many adaptive human cognitive variations that have been maintained in modern populations via multiple genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. Introgression from "archaic" hominids (adapted for less demanding social environments) is conjectured as the source of initial intraspecific heterogeneity because strict inclusive fitness does not adequately model the evolution of distinct, copy-number sensitive phenotypes within a freely reproducing population.

    Evidence is given of divergent encephalization and brain organization in the Neanderthal (including a ~1520 cc cranial capacity, larger than that of modern humans) to explain the origin of the autism subgroup characterized by abnormal brain growth.

    Autism and immune dysfunction are frequently comorbid. This supports an admixture model in light of the recent discovery that MHC alleles (genes linked to immune function, mate selection, neuronal "pruning," etc.) found in most modern human populations come from "archaic" hominids.

    Mitochondrial dysfunction, differential fetal androgen exposure, lung abnormalities, and hypomethylation/CNV due to hybridization are also presented as evidence.

    https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B3dPqM3qgNSiY3p5TmFRMjhSekdyaV8wWUw0MTZiUQ

    A short video introduction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk_85vNaSMA

    The full 2-hour video presentation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6-6Naz-C0M
  • +1

    A comment on Talk: Ami Klin: A new way to diagnose autism

    Jun 9 2012: Autism: The Eusocial Hominid Hypothesis

    ASDs (autism spectrum disorders) are hypothesized as one of many adaptive human cognitive variations that have been maintained in modern populations via multiple genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. Introgression from "archaic" hominids (adapted for less demanding social environments) is conjectured as the source of initial intraspecific heterogeneity because strict inclusive fitness does not adequately model the evolution of distinct, copy-number sensitive phenotypes within a freely reproducing population.

    Evidence is given of divergent encephalization and brain organization in the Neanderthal (including a ~1520 cc cranial capacity, larger than that of modern humans) to explain the origin of the autism subgroup characterized by abnormal brain growth.

    Autism and immune dysfunction are frequently comorbid. This supports an admixture model in light of the recent discovery that MHC alleles (genes linked to immune function, mate selection, neuronal "pruning," etc.) found in most modern human populations come from "archaic" hominids.

    Mitochondrial dysfunction, differential fetal androgen exposure, lung abnormalities, and hypomethylation/CNV due to hybridization are also presented as evidence.

    https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B3dPqM3qgNSiY3p5TmFRMjhSekdyaV8wWUw0MTZiUQ

    A short video introduction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk_85vNaSMA

    The full 2-hour video presentation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6-6Naz-C0M
  • +2

    A comment on Conversation: Is autism, or some types of autism, an evolutionary effect.

    Jun 7 2012: Autism: The Eusocial Hominid Hypothesis

    ASDs (autism spectrum disorders) are hypothesized as one of many adaptive human cognitive variations that have been maintained in modern populations via multiple genetic and epigenetic mechanisms. Introgression from "archaic" hominids (adapted for less demanding social environments) is conjectured as the source of initial intraspecific heterogeneity because strict inclusive fitness does not adequately model the evolution of distinct, copy-number sensitive phenotypes within a freely reproducing population.

    Evidence is given of divergent encephalization and brain organization in the Neanderthal (including a ~1520 cc cranial capacity, larger than that of modern humans) to explain the origin of the autism subgroup characterized by abnormal brain growth.

    Autism and immune dysfunction are frequently comorbid. This supports an admixture model in light of the recent discovery that MHC alleles (genes linked to immune function, mate selection, neuronal "pruning," etc.) found in most modern human populations come from "archaic" hominids.

    Mitochondrial dysfunction, differential fetal androgen exposure, lung abnormalities, and hypomethylation/CNV due to hybridization are also presented as evidence.

    https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B3dPqM3qgNSiY3p5TmFRMjhSekdyaV8wWUw0MTZiUQ

    A short video introduction: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jk_85vNaSMA

    The full 2-hour video presentation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6-6Naz-C0M

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