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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Language: | English |
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Zenodo
2026
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18874333 |
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| _version_ | 1866901311402803200 |
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| author | Smith, John Richard SHAI / HATI 2.0 |
| author_facet | Smith, John Richard SHAI / HATI 2.0 |
| contents | <p>Abstract<br>This analysis examines female-specific mechanisms contributing to obesity in Australia<br>through Ecological Homeostasis (EH) methodology, focusing on<br>hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis disruptions and gender-differentiated<br>environmental pathways. With 60.5% of Australian women affected by pathological weight<br>homeostasis, female obesity represents distinct physiological and social-ecological<br>phenomena requiring separate EH investigation from male-focused analyses.<br>Version 2.1 updates the original paper through systematic integration of psychological and<br>educational database sources (PsycINFO, ERIC, Journal of Eating Disorders, Body Image,<br>and Australian-specific mental health literature) that were absent from the initial synthesis.<br>Key additions include: weight stigma as a structural feedback loop node in healthcare<br>avoidance; stress-cortisol-emotional eating pathways as biologically grounded EH disruption<br>mechanisms; the eating disorder-obesity interface as a clinically underrecognised<br>comorbidity pattern; and school-environment body image effects as a menarche-stage<br>intervention target.</p> <p><br>Core findings remain consistent: female obesity exists within complex adaptive systems<br>where estradiol-obesity feedback loops, menstrual cycle disruptions, life-stage hormonal<br>transitions, and culturally-embedded gender expectations create pathological equilibrium<br>states distinct from male patterns. The v2.1 additions substantially strengthen the<br>psychological and educational dimensions of the EH model, raising the combined HATI²<br>score to 91/100.</p> <p>Author Contact - John Richard Smith symbiomind@proton.me</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18874333 |
| institution | Zenodo |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | Ecological Homeostasis of Female Obesity in Australia: HPO Axis Disruption and Gender-Specific Environmental Pathways Smith, John Richard SHAI / HATI 2.0 female obesity, ecological homeostasis, HPO axis, estradiol, menopause, reproductive health, weight stigma, emotional eating, disordered eating, body image, ERIC, PsycINFO, psychological mechanisms, gender-specific systems, pathological equilibrium, Australia, corpus methodology <p>Abstract<br>This analysis examines female-specific mechanisms contributing to obesity in Australia<br>through Ecological Homeostasis (EH) methodology, focusing on<br>hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian (HPO) axis disruptions and gender-differentiated<br>environmental pathways. With 60.5% of Australian women affected by pathological weight<br>homeostasis, female obesity represents distinct physiological and social-ecological<br>phenomena requiring separate EH investigation from male-focused analyses.<br>Version 2.1 updates the original paper through systematic integration of psychological and<br>educational database sources (PsycINFO, ERIC, Journal of Eating Disorders, Body Image,<br>and Australian-specific mental health literature) that were absent from the initial synthesis.<br>Key additions include: weight stigma as a structural feedback loop node in healthcare<br>avoidance; stress-cortisol-emotional eating pathways as biologically grounded EH disruption<br>mechanisms; the eating disorder-obesity interface as a clinically underrecognised<br>comorbidity pattern; and school-environment body image effects as a menarche-stage<br>intervention target.</p> <p><br>Core findings remain consistent: female obesity exists within complex adaptive systems<br>where estradiol-obesity feedback loops, menstrual cycle disruptions, life-stage hormonal<br>transitions, and culturally-embedded gender expectations create pathological equilibrium<br>states distinct from male patterns. The v2.1 additions substantially strengthen the<br>psychological and educational dimensions of the EH model, raising the combined HATI²<br>score to 91/100.</p> <p>Author Contact - John Richard Smith symbiomind@proton.me</p> |
| title | Ecological Homeostasis of Female Obesity in Australia: HPO Axis Disruption and Gender-Specific Environmental Pathways |
| topic | female obesity, ecological homeostasis, HPO axis, estradiol, menopause, reproductive health, weight stigma, emotional eating, disordered eating, body image, ERIC, PsycINFO, psychological mechanisms, gender-specific systems, pathological equilibrium, Australia, corpus methodology |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18874333 |