All posts tagged: kinder

Relatives with lower paternity uncertainty are perceived as kinder

Relatives with lower paternity uncertainty are perceived as kinder

According to a large study published in Evolutionary Psychology, people consistently perceive family members as kinder when there is greater certainty of biological relatedness. Humans often assume that kindness within families is driven mainly by love, shared history, or cultural expectations. Yet evolutionary theories suggest that altruism within families may also be shaped by genetic relatedness. According to kin selection theory, people are predisposed to invest more care and support in relatives who are more likely to share their genes, because such investment indirectly promotes their own genetic success. One important factor complicating this picture is paternity uncertainty, the fact that, unlike maternity, biological fatherhood is never absolutely certain. Radim Kuba and Jaroslav Flegr examined whether this uncertainty influences how people perceive kindness among different family members. Drawing on evolutionary psychology and prior findings on parental and grandparental investment, they asked whether relatives associated with higher paternity certainty (such as mothers or maternal grandmothers) are consistently seen as kinder than those associated with lower certainty (such as paternal grandfathers). The researchers analyzed data from a …

Driving kinder cancer care for pets through comparative oncology

Driving kinder cancer care for pets through comparative oncology

Kyrexa is advancing cancer treatment for companion animals through comparative oncology, with their lead drug rimcazole, now ready for pivotal development following successful pilot evaluations in dogs with advanced cancers. Kyrexa’s vision to deliver kind, but effective, treatment for cancer in companion animals was discussed in its introductory article. Kyrexa’s lead drug was underpinned by many decades of scientific endeavour, which had stalled due to some missing key pieces of the jigsaw and a disbelief that a single common approach to the treatment of cancer could ever be envisaged. In this second article, Kyrexa explains how comparative oncology – the study of cancer in animals and humans – shone a light on what had been missing from the research efforts to date, all of which had been in laboratory-based models of cancer that did not adequately mimic authentic cancer that arises spontaneously in an animal or human. Comparative oncology is continuing to reveal remarkable similarities between human and canine cancer, in particular, driving synergies that are accelerating progress in oncology therapeutics to the mutual benefit …