Disease Prevalence and Fatality, Life History Strategies, and Behavioral Control of the COVID Pandemic

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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic caught the world by surprise and raised many questions. One of the questions is whether infectious diseases indeed drive fast life history (LH) as the extent research suggests. This paper challenges this assumption and raises a different perspective. We argue that infectious diseases enact either slower or faster LH strategies and the related disease control behavior depending on disease severity. We tested and supported the theorization based on a sample of 662 adult residents drawn from all 32 provinces and administrative regions of mainland China. The findings help to broaden LH perspectives and to better understand unusual social phenomena arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Lu, H. J., Wang, X. R., Liu, Y. Y., & Chang, L. (2022). Disease Prevalence and Fatality, Life History Strategies, and Behavioral Control of the COVID Pandemic. Evolutionary Psychological Science, 8(1), 20–29. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40806-021-00306-9

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