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Altricial, but not unusual: Comparative analysis of human dependency period within mammalian life history patterns

Akcan, C. D.; Kece, D.; Kerman, K.

2026-06-19 zoology
10.64898/2026.06.16.732383 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Humans are widely regarded as unusually slow to develop, exhibiting prolonged childhood and extended dependence on caregivers. However, this view is based primarily on comparisons with other primates, leaving unresolved whether humans remain distinctive within the broader diversity of mammals. We addressed this question by situating human development in a comparative framework using gestation length, weaning age, and age at sexual maturity for both sexes across 462 mammalian species representing 25 orders. Each trait was examined both as an absolute value and as a proportion of the longest verified captive lifespan. In absolute terms, human developmental traits fell within the upper range of mammalian variation. When expressed relative to lifespan, however, gestation shifted toward the lower end of the distribution, whereas weaning age and sexual maturity occupied intermediate positions, indicating that human developmental timing largely follows general mammalian scaling patterns rather than representing a pronounced outlier. These findings suggest that key features of human dependency are better understood as extensions of broader evolutionary trends than as uniquely human life-history characteristics.

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