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Noah Snyder-Mackler

Researcher at Arizona State University

Publications -  112
Citations -  2474

Noah Snyder-Mackler is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 76 publications receiving 1365 citations. Previous affiliations of Noah Snyder-Mackler include University of Pennsylvania & University of Washington.

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Social determinants of health and survival in humans and other animals

TL;DR: These findings suggest that some aspects of the social determinants of health—especially those that can be modeled through studies of direct social interaction in nonhuman animals—have deep evolutionary roots and present new opportunities for studying the emergence of social disparities in health and mortality risk.
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Social status alters immune regulation and response to infection in macaques

TL;DR: Genomics is combined with social status manipulation in female rhesus macaques to investigate how status alters immune function, and causal but largely plastic social status effects on immune cell proportions, cell type–specific gene expression levels, and the gene expression response to immune challenge are demonstrated.
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Defining Higher Levels in the Multilevel Societies of Geladas (Theropithecus gelada)

TL;DR: Gelada society is an extremely flexible, multilevel society with fission–fusion dynamics, and as such gelada society presents an unusual example for understanding the evolution of modular societies.
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Concessions of an alpha male? Cooperative defence and shared reproduction in multi-male primate groups

TL;DR: The most comprehensive evidence to date in support of the concession model in a vertebrate is presented, suggesting that dominants and subordinates may engage in mutually beneficial reproductive transactions, thus favouring male–male tolerance and cooperation.
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Deconstructing sociality: the types of social connections that predict longevity in a group-living primate.

TL;DR: This study uses survival models and long-term data in adult female rhesus macaques to compare the fitness outcomes of multiple measures of social connectedness and finds no survival benefits to being structurally well-connected or engaging in high rates of grooming.