Samuli Helle
 Ph.D., Docent
| 
 sayrhe@utu.fi +358 29 450 4887 +358 45 355 7634 | 
Evolutionary ecology; demography; epidemiology; statistics; fishing.
My main research interest is human evolutionary demography in preindustrial populations. In my research I use historical demographic data from northern Fennoscandia that contain people practicing traditional subsistence modes as well small-scale agriculture and trading. This data set is accompanied with wealth of information on how those people lived and on their environmental conditions. I also work sporadically with other study systems related to evolutionary psychology, evolutionary medicine and behavioral ecology.
-   (2008)  - Evolution and Human BehaviorProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
 
- Do humans adjust offspring sex according to the local operational sex ratio?  (2008)  - Evolutionary Ecology ResearchNature
 
- Female field voles with high testosterone and glucose levels produce male-biased litters  (2008)  - Animal BehaviourScience
 
-   (2008)   Helle S
- Marrying women 15 years younger maximized men's evolutionary fitness in historical Sami  (2008)  - Biology Letters
 
- Maternal 2nd to 4th Digit Ratio Does Not Predict Lifetime Offspring Sex Ratio at Birth  (2008)  - American Journal of Human Biology
 
- 2008- Biology Letters
 
- Why twin pregnancies are more successful at advanced than young maternal age? A potential role of 'terminal reproductive investment'  (2008)   Helle S
- Climatic variability and the population dynamics of historical hunter-gatherers: The case of Sami of northern Finland  (2007)  - American Journal of Human Biology
 
- Natural Selection on Female Life-History Traits in Relation to Socio-Economic Class in Pre-Industrial Human Populations  (2007)  - PLoS ONE
 
- Are reproductive and somatic senescence coupled in humans? Late, but not early, reproduction correlated with longevity in historical Sami women  (2005)  - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
 
- Accelerated immunosenescence in preindustrial twin mothers  (2004)  
- Fitness benefits of prolonged post-reproductive lifespan in women  (2004)  
- Selection for increased brood size in historical human populations  (2004)  - Evolution
 
- Effect of producing sons on maternal longevity in premodern populations - Response  (2002)  
- Human longevity and early reproduction in pre-industrial Sami populations  (2002)  - Journal of Evolutionary Biology
 
- Sons reduced maternal longevity in preindustrial humans  (2002)  - Science
 





