Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Amir, Dorsa
Jordan, Matthew
and
Rand, David G.
2017.
An Uncertainty Management Perspective on Long-Run Impacts of Adversity: The Influence of Childhood Socioeconomic Status on Risk, Time, and Social Preferences.
SSRN Electronic Journal ,
Nettle, Daniel
Andrews, Clare
and
Bateson, Melissa
2017.
Adaptive principles of weight regulation: Insufficient, but perhaps necessary, for understanding obesity.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
Vol. 40,
Issue. ,
Vilchez, Jose L.
2017.
The Solution for the Behavioural Constellation of Deprivation.
Psychology and Developing Societies,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 2,
p.
246.
Lu, Hui Jing
Wong, Kam-chuen
and
Chang, Lei
2017.
The association between life history strategy and mate preference in men.
Personality and Individual Differences,
Vol. 116,
Issue. ,
p.
157.
Nettle, Daniel
2017.
Does Hunger Contribute to Socioeconomic Gradients in Behavior?.
Frontiers in Psychology,
Vol. 8,
Issue. ,
Brienza, Justin P.
and
Grossmann, Igor
2017.
Social class and wise reasoning about interpersonal conflicts across regions, persons and situations.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Vol. 284,
Issue. 1869,
p.
20171870.
Lazarus, John
2017.
Cooperation in adversity: an evolutionary approach.
Global Discourse,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 4,
p.
571.
Nettle, Daniel
2018.
Hanging on to the Edges: Essays on Science, Society and the Academic Life.
Chang, Lei
and
Lu, Hui Jing
2018.
Resource and extrinsic risk in defining fast life histories of rural Chinese left-behind children.
Evolution and Human Behavior,
Vol. 39,
Issue. 1,
p.
59.
Baumard, Nicolas
2018.
Increased affluence, life history theory, and the decline of shamanism.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
Vol. 41,
Issue. ,
Taylor, Lesley
and
Barrett, Whitney
2018.
Developing a trauma-informed approach to closing the poverty-related attainment gap.
Educational and Child Psychology,
Vol. 35,
Issue. 3,
p.
64.
Dieguez, Sebastian
2018.
La Fontaine.
Cerveau & Psycho,
Vol. N° 103,
Issue. 9,
p.
94.
Bateson, Melissa
and
Nettle, Daniel
2018.
Why are there associations between telomere length and behaviour?.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Vol. 373,
Issue. 1741,
p.
20160438.
Doebel, Sabine
and
Munakata, Yuko
2018.
Group Influences on Engaging Self-Control: Children Delay Gratification and Value It More When Their In-Group Delays and Their Out-Group Doesn’t.
Psychological Science,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 5,
p.
738.
Lee, Anthony J.
DeBruine, Lisa M.
and
Jones, Benedict C.
2018.
Individual-specific mortality is associated with how individuals evaluate future discounting decisions.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Vol. 285,
Issue. 1880,
p.
20180304.
Lu, Hui Jing
and
Chang, Lei
2019.
Aggression and risk‐taking as adaptive implementations of fast life history strategy.
Developmental Science,
Vol. 22,
Issue. 5,
Vásquez-Echeverría, Alejandro
Tomás, Clementina
and
Cruz, Orlanda
2019.
The development of episodic foresight in preschoolers: the role of socioeconomic status, parental future orientation, and family context.
Psicologia: Reflexão e Crítica,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 1,
Hallowell, Emily S.
Oshri, Assaf
Liebel, Spencer W.
Liu, Sihong
Duda, Bryant
Clark, Uraina S.
and
Sweet, Lawrence H.
2019.
The Mediating Role of Neural Activity on the Relationship Between Childhood Maltreatment and Impulsivity.
Child Maltreatment,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 4,
p.
389.
Jun, Eun Ryeong
Kim, Sung Hi
Cho, Yoon Jeong
Kim, Yun-A
and
Lee, Joo Young
2019.
The Influence of Negative Mental Health on the Health Behavior and the Mortality Risk: Analysis of Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging from 2006 to 2014.
Korean Journal of Family Medicine,
Vol. 40,
Issue. 5,
p.
297.
Baumard, Nicolas
2019.
Psychological origins of the Industrial Revolution.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
Vol. 42,
Issue. ,
Target article
The behavioural constellation of deprivation: Causes and consequences
Related commentaries (31)
Beyond personal control: The role of developing self-control abilities in the behavioral constellation of deprivation
Both collection risk and waiting costs give rise to the behavioral constellation of deprivation
Cultural consonance, deprivation, and psychological responses for niche construction
Deprived, but not depraved: Prosocial behavior is an adaptive response to lower socioeconomic status
Developing the behavioural constellation of deprivation: Relationships, emotions, and not quite being in the present
Divergent life histories and other ecological adaptations: Examples of social-class differences in attention, cognition, and attunement to others
Epigenetic-based hormesis and age-dependent altruism: Additions to the behavioural constellation of deprivation
Evolutionary approaches to deprivation transform the ethics of policy making
From perceived control to self-control, the importance of cognitive and emotional resources
Health behaviour, extrinsic risks, and the exceptions to the rule
Intergenerational capital flows are central to fitness dynamics and adaptive evolution in humans
Interpreting risky behavior as a contextually appropriate response: Significance and policy implications beyond socioeconomic status
Intertemporal impulsivity can also arise from persistent failure of long-term plans
It's not just about the future: The present payoffs to behaviour vary in degree and kind between the rich and the poor
Loss of control is not necessary to induce behavioral consequences of deprivation: The case of religious fasting during Ramadan
Predictability or controllability: Which matters more for the BCD?
Public health interventions can increase objective and perceived control by supporting people to enact the choices they want to make
Relative state, social comparison reactions, and the behavioral constellation of deprivation
Socioeconomic status, unpredictability, and different perceptions of the same risk
Stuff goes wrong, so act now
The behavioral constellation of deprivation may be best understood as risk management
The behavioural constellation of deprivation: Compelling framework, messy reality
The elusive constellations of poverty
The link between deprivation and its behavioural constellation is confounded by genetic factors
The physiological constellation of deprivation: Immunological strategies and health outcomes
The uncontrollable nature of early learning experiences
The “appropriate” response to deprivation: Evolutionary and ethical dimensions
Toward a balanced view of stress-adapted cognition
Uncertainty about future payoffs makes impatience rational
What about the behavioral constellation of advantage?
When does deprivation motivate future-oriented thinking? The case of climate change
Author response
Strengths, altered investment, risk management, and other elaborations on the behavioural constellation of deprivation