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NO TIME TO EAT: AN ADAPTATIONIST ACCOUNT OF PERIOVULATORY BEHAVIORAL CHANGES.

Authors :
Ruse, Michael
Falk, Arthur R.
Regal, Philip J.
Selinger, Evan
Fraser, David
Maienschein, Jane
Smocovitis, Vassiliki Betty
Neeley, Kathryn A.
Bernardi, Giacomo
Thomson, James D.
Green, Beverly R.
Rass, Linda
Janke, Steven
Solé, Ricard V.
Farel, Paul B.
Gillis, Gary B.
Bercovitch, Fred B.
Dudley, Robert
Source :
Quarterly Review of Biology; Mar2003, Vol. 78 Issue 1, p3, 19p
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

A comprehensive review of women's dietary behavior across the menstrual cycle suggests a drop in caloric intake around the time of ovulation; similar patterns occur in many other mammals. The periovulatory nadir is puzzling, as it is not explicable in terms of changes in the energy budget. Existing explanations in the animal literature opiate wholly at the proximate level of analysis and hence do not address this puzzle. In this paper, I offer an ultimate explanation for the periovulatory feeding nadir; arguing that the decrease in the set point for satiation during the fertile period of the female cycle is an adaptation produced by natural selection in order to reduce the motivational salience of goals that compete with those directly or indirectly pertaining to mating. In support of this explanation, I adduce evidence of: a) periovulatory reductions in other ingestive behaviors, and b) periovulatory increases in motor activity and the psychological concomitants thereof. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00335770
Volume :
78
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Quarterly Review of Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9323995