In 1960, the foreign-born population made up about 5% of the US population. By 2015, this number had increased to over 40 million and the foreign-born made up about 13% of the US population. As a result, the health and mortality of the foreign-born carry an increasing weight in estimates of health and mortality at the national, regional and local levels and among the racial/ethnic population subgroups. Irma Elo reviews evidence of the mortality levels of the foreign born, with examples of their contribution to health and mortality in the United States. This talk is Co-Sponsored by the Center for Biobehavioral Health Disparities Research (CBHDR).
Date
11/30/2017 - 11/30/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Humans tend to form social relationships with others who resemble them. Whether this sorting of like with like arises from historical patterns of migration, meso-level social structures in modern society, or individual-level selection of similar peers remains unsettled. But new research suggests that unobserved genotypes may play an important role in the creation of homophilous relationships. Stanford's Ben Domingue discusses his recent work which utilized data from 9,500 adolescents from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to examine genetic similarities among pairs of friends.
Date
11/09/2017 - 11/09/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Modeling and computation for multivariate longitudinal is challenging, particularly when data contain discrete measurements of different types. Motivated by data on the fluidity of sexuality from adolescence to adulthood, Duke's Amy Herring discusses her new nonparametric approach for mixed-scale longitudinal data.
Date
10/26/2017 - 10/26/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Surveys have traditionally been based on the idea that researchers can estimate characteristics of a population by obtaining a sample of individuals and asking them to report about themselves. Network reporting surveys generalize this traditional approach by asking survey respondents to report about members of their personal networks. UC Berkley's Dennis Feehan discusses his framework for developing estimators from network reporting surveys and reviews the results from a nationally-representative survey experiment that he conducted in Rwanda.
Date
10/19/2017 - 10/19/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
There is growing evidence that the trillions of microbes that inhabit the human body have profound implications for human health. The microbiome is malleable, and it is sensitive to human environments, individual choice, and human behavior. Jen Dowd discusses her recent work on how the social environment impacts the microbiome using data from the NYC-HANES as well as the TwinsUK study. She also reviews future opportunities for future collaboration between social and biological scientists in cohorts such as AddHealth and the WLS.
Date
9/28/2017 - 9/28/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Gastric cancer is the second deadliest cancer in the world, and incidence and mortality rates are highest in East Asia. Duke’s Meira Epplein discusses how she utilized new H. pylori multiplex serology to increase numbers of sero-positive results to six H. pylori proteins offered a possible new biomarker panel for gastric cancer risk in among urban men living in Shanghai, China.
Date
9/21/2017 - 9/21/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Ridhi Kashyap discusses the demographic implications of one of the most striking expressions of gender inequalty — son preference. Kashyap examines both the postnatal manifestations of son preference in the form of gender gaps in mortality and health, as well as in the prenatal manifestations in the form of sex-selective abortion and sex ratio at birth distortions. Kashyap also looks at the long-term implications of son preference and sex ratio distortions for population dynamics.
Date
9/14/2017 - 9/14/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
SSRI-Gross Hall 270
Robert Pollak discusses the substantial effects of fathers' multiple-partner fertility (MPF) on children's long-term educational outcomes. He posits that analysis suggests that the effects of fathers' MPF are primarily due to selection rather than resources. He also discusses how his results show that fathers’ MPF warrants far more attention than it has thus far received.
Date
4/12/2017 - 4/12/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
230E Gross Hall
For children, parental separation is often accompanied by an increased risk of poverty and deteriorating living standards. These effects have been studied over relatively short periods of time, and not considering the multi-faceted context of childhood disadvantage. Lidia Panico discusses how she used the UK Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative cohort of over 18,000 children, to consider how parental separation affects the experience of childhood poverty and multi-domain deprivation from birth to age 11.
Date
3/23/2017 - 3/23/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
230E Gross Hall
It is now recognized among many scholars that most socio-behavioral outcomes evince both strong genetic and environmental components that contribute to their variation in natural populations. The next step in reconciling nature and nurture, then, is to properly model gene-environment interplay. Princeton’s Dalton Conley discuss a series of attempts to apply econometric methods for causal inference--namely, a natural experiment framework--to genome-wide data available in social surveys to model gene-by-environment interaction effects. He also reviews alternatives to conceptualizing and measuring genetic regulation of plasticity that may inform GxE models.
Date
3/09/2017 - 3/09/2017
Time
3:30pm - 4:30pm
Venue
230E Gross Hall