Senescence Stability
Cross-source consensus on Senescence Stability from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- The results support stability of the Gompertz slope across cohorts within populations once period shocks are modeled. — The rhythm of aging: Stability and drift in the individual rate of senescence
- The central question is whether longevity gains reflect slower aging or delayed onset of aging. — The rhythm of aging: Stability and drift in the individual rate of senescence
- Vaupel's hypothesis proposes that the rate of mortality-risk increase may be biologically stable across individuals and time. — The rhythm of aging: Stability and drift in the individual rate of senescence
- The findings favor temporal stability within populations rather than strict universal invariance across all populations. — The rhythm of aging: Stability and drift in the individual rate of senescence
- Longevity gains may be better explained by lower mortality levels and postponed senescence onset than by sustained slowing of intrinsic late-life aging. — The rhythm of aging: Stability and drift in the individual rate of senescence