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19 pages, 1297 KiB  
Article
The Genghis Khan Effect
by Sergio Da Silva, Raul Matsushita and Sergio Bonini
Humans 2025, 5(3), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5030019 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 368
Abstract
This study examines the impact of reproductive inequality on the long-term survival of Homo sapiens by comparing two reproductive models: the Pareto (power-law) distribution of unequal reproduction and the Gaussian (normal) distribution of equal reproduction. We conducted simulations to explore how genetic diversity, [...] Read more.
This study examines the impact of reproductive inequality on the long-term survival of Homo sapiens by comparing two reproductive models: the Pareto (power-law) distribution of unequal reproduction and the Gaussian (normal) distribution of equal reproduction. We conducted simulations to explore how genetic diversity, measured by heterozygosity, evolves over time. The results predict population crashes due to genetic bottlenecks under both models, but with large differences in timing. We refer to Pareto reproductive inequality as the Genghis Khan effect. This effect accelerates the loss of genetic diversity, increasing the species’ vulnerability to environmental stressors, resource depletion, and genetic drift, and thereby raising the risk of an earlier population collapse. Our findings showcase the importance of reproductive balance for the prolonged presence of Homo sapiens on this planet. Full article
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18 pages, 299 KiB  
Review
Individualism and Affliction: Cultural Responses to Disease
by Shawn M. Phillips and Joanna R. Phillips
Humans 2025, 5(3), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5030018 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 562
Abstract
This review essay proposes that the influence of individualism, the tendency to prefer individual freedoms over collective obligations, in American society impacted the manner in which the US population responded to the recent global COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, societal rifts were exposed [...] Read more.
This review essay proposes that the influence of individualism, the tendency to prefer individual freedoms over collective obligations, in American society impacted the manner in which the US population responded to the recent global COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, societal rifts were exposed that questioned the infringement on personal freedoms by governmental authority in the effort to protect public health. The essay traces the development of individualism from the Enlightenment through the emergence of the United States, during which individualism entwined with American identity. A review of social science research in the fields sociology, psychology, and anthropology demonstrates the ways in which individualism, in varying degrees from self-centered to collectivist tendencies, can be observed to affect social interaction and perception. With that background, it is possible to use individualism as a lens to investigate cultural responses to affliction. Societal responses to leprosy, syphilis, and COVID-19 are examined, and it is argued that the influence of degrees of individualism greatly impacted the social responses, and the extent to which individual freedoms were lost was notably varied in each case. Full article
20 pages, 267 KiB  
Article
A Systems Thinking Approach to Political Polarization and Encounters of Dysrecognition
by Gregory A. Thompson and Soren Pearce
Humans 2025, 5(3), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5030017 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 380
Abstract
In this article, we employ a Batesonian systems thinking approach to analyze politically polarized and politically polarizing encounters in the contemporary United States. We bring together Bateson’s concepts of schismogenesis, double binds, metacommunication, and transcontextualism with recent work on recognition and resonance in [...] Read more.
In this article, we employ a Batesonian systems thinking approach to analyze politically polarized and politically polarizing encounters in the contemporary United States. We bring together Bateson’s concepts of schismogenesis, double binds, metacommunication, and transcontextualism with recent work on recognition and resonance in order to show how these encounters create moments of transcontextual double binds that produce mutual dysrecognition. We show how these moments of mutual dysrecognition become both animating forces of political polarization in the moment while also becoming constitutive poetic resonances for making sense of future events. When these moments of dysrecognition are considered alongside the removal of mechanisms that restrain schismogenesis, the United States body politic is becoming increasingly schizophrenic—split in two with both parts incommunicado with the other such that the whole system is veering towards collapse. We close by briefly considering the kind of deutero-learning, to use Bateson’s term, that might help to stave off such a collapse. Full article
19 pages, 10985 KiB  
Article
The Lost History: Anthropological Analysis of 93 Post-WWII Skeletal Remains from Eboli Refugee Camp (Campania, Italy) Rediscovered After 75 Years in Bari’s Monumental Cemetery (Apulia, Italy)
by Alessia Leggio
Humans 2025, 5(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020016 - 16 Jun 2025
Viewed by 790
Abstract
The following work is based on the historical–anthropological analysis of 93 skeletal remains belonging to post-war casualties who died in 1946 and remained missing for years. In 2019, 93 metal boxes containing skeletal remains of Slavic origin, belonging to civilians and soldiers who [...] Read more.
The following work is based on the historical–anthropological analysis of 93 skeletal remains belonging to post-war casualties who died in 1946 and remained missing for years. In 2019, 93 metal boxes containing skeletal remains of Slavic origin, belonging to civilians and soldiers who perished in the immediate postwar period following World War II, were found inside the ossuary of the Monumental Cemetery in Bari (Italy). At the beginning of the search, these people were thought to have died in prison camps in Apulia, such as Torre Tresca and Grumo Appula, in the province of Bari. Later, thanks to the discovery of war badges and years of extensive historical research, it was discovered that these remains had been missing for 75 years and belonged to soldiers of the Royal Yugoslav Army and civilians, probably their relatives, who died in 1946 in the refugee camp of Eboli, in the province of Salerno, Campania (Italy). To unveil this truth that remained hidden for over 75 years, a multidisciplinary study divided into two phases was applied. The first phase, grounded in historical research study, aimed to determine the historical and temporal context in which they lived and confirm the life they actually lived in the Eboli refugee camp. The second phase, grounded in anthropological research, aimed to reconstruct the biological profile of each individual, identify the presence of antemortem, perimortem, and postmortem lesions, assess potential pathological conditions, and determine, where possible, the cause of death. Finally, a correlation of the collected data was conducted to ascertain and corroborate, with reasonable certainty, the living conditions to which they were subjected in the refugee camp where they resided. Italy after 1943 became the scene of intense fighting and a dramatic situation for prisoners of war, including many Yugoslav soldiers. This work brought to light a history that had been lost for as many as 75 years, highlighted the importance, specifically, of the role of the Eboli refugee camp, a context little known and forgotten by many, and above all made it possible to remember and restore dignity to the victims of the Great War. Full article
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15 pages, 251 KiB  
Article
An Inheritance Saga: Migration, Kinship, and Postcolonial Bureaucracy in the Llorente vs. Llorente Case of Nabua, Philippines
by Dada Docot
Humans 2025, 5(2), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020015 - 29 May 2025
Viewed by 1168
Abstract
The landmark Philippine Supreme Court case Llorente vs. Llorente illuminates the complex intersections of transnational migration, inheritance law, and colonial legacies in the Philippines. The case centers on Lorenzo Llorente, a Filipino US Navy serviceman whose estate became the subject of a fifteen-year [...] Read more.
The landmark Philippine Supreme Court case Llorente vs. Llorente illuminates the complex intersections of transnational migration, inheritance law, and colonial legacies in the Philippines. The case centers on Lorenzo Llorente, a Filipino US Navy serviceman whose estate became the subject of a fifteen-year legal battle between his first wife Paula and his second wife Alicia. Lorenzo returned from the battles of World War II to find his wife in Nabua living with his brother and pregnant with his brother’s child. Lorenzo obtained a divorce in California in 1952. He later returned to the Philippines and married Alicia, naming her and their three adopted children as heirs in his will. Upon his death in 1985, Paula challenged the validity of the US divorce and claimed rights to Lorenzo’s estate under Philippine succession laws. While lower courts initially favored Paula’s claims by rigidly applying Philippine laws that are rooted in the colonial era and privileged blood relations, the Supreme Court ultimately upheld Lorenzo’s will in 2000, recognizing his right to divorce as a US citizen. This case reveals how postcolonial Philippine legal frameworks, still heavily influenced by Spanish colonial law, often fail to accommodate the complex realities of transnational families and diverse kinship practices, instead imposing rigid interpretations that fracture rather than heal family relations. Inheritance, previously a highly shared and negotiated process mediated by the elders, can now escalate to family disputes which play out in the impersonal space of the courtroom. Full article
22 pages, 11241 KiB  
Article
Experimental Archaeological Study of Incised Marks on Animal Bones Produced by Iron Implements
by Zhaokui Wang, Huiping Li, Ziqiang Zhang, Qiang Guo, Yanfeng Hou and Roderick B. Campbell
Humans 2025, 5(2), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020014 - 15 May 2025
Viewed by 1101
Abstract
In zooarchaeological research, animal bone fractures can result from various processes including slaughtering, dismemberment, marrow/grease extraction, craft processing, carnivore gnawing/trampling, sediment compression, bioturbation, and recovery bias. These fractures are further influenced by bone freshness/dryness and environmental temperature. The animal bones analysed in this [...] Read more.
In zooarchaeological research, animal bone fractures can result from various processes including slaughtering, dismemberment, marrow/grease extraction, craft processing, carnivore gnawing/trampling, sediment compression, bioturbation, and recovery bias. These fractures are further influenced by bone freshness/dryness and environmental temperature. The animal bones analysed in this study, excavated from Han dynasty tombs in the Xinxiang Plain New District, China, represent ritual offerings. These specimens exhibit distinct truncation features—chop surfaces, rough planes, and fracture traces—created by ancient iron tools for culinary purposes such as stewing preparation or consumption facilitation. These characteristics differ significantly, from the V-shaped butchery marks produced by stone/bronze tools and fracture patterns from marrow/grease extraction to post-depositional breakage formed during burial processes. In this study, steel tools were employed in the rocking slicing and rolling slicing of animal bones, complemented by techniques such as breaking to sever bone shafts. Subsequently, the marks on the cross-sections were observed using a stereomicroscope, and the results were compared and analysed with the materials from Han dynasty tombs unearthed at Xinxiang city, Henan Province. From the comparison between experimental observation results and archaeological materials, it is evident that the fine processing of meat-bearing bone materials mainly involved the use of rocking and rolling slicing methods. The cross-sections of the slices revealed shearing surfaces, rough patches, bone splinters, and sliced ends. The shearing surfaces in particular exhibited numerous visible trace characteristics, with the types and quantities of these traces varying with different cutting tools. This study holds significant reference value for exploring cutting tools and techniques in antiquity. Full article
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14 pages, 1471 KiB  
Article
The Effects of Gut Volume and Parity on the Pubis
by Emma Long, Emma Piasecki, Jeanelle Uy and Natalie Laudicina
Humans 2025, 5(2), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020013 - 8 May 2025
Viewed by 716
Abstract
The human pelvis is adapted to accommodate bipedal locomotion while retaining a wide enough pelvic canal to birth large babies. Many forces act on the pubic bone, with the pelvis being in charge of supporting the organs of the abdominopelvic cavity. In this [...] Read more.
The human pelvis is adapted to accommodate bipedal locomotion while retaining a wide enough pelvic canal to birth large babies. Many forces act on the pubic bone, with the pelvis being in charge of supporting the organs of the abdominopelvic cavity. In this research, we investigate whether increases in gut volume (GV) and number of births (parity) impact the skeletal morphology of the pubic bone at two regions: the pubic symphysis and the pubic arch. Our results indicate that in our female sample, the pubic symphysis width increased with increased GV and parity, while the pubic arch width decreased with increased GV and parity, although not significantly. In the male sample, there was almost no effect of increased GV on the pubic symphysis, while the pubic arch width increased in response to increased GV. We hypothesize that while significance is not present for this entire data set, these pelvic structures are impacted by GV and parity, and these changes should be investigated further. These changes in the structure can impact the function of the pelvic girdle and result in pain and changes to mobility. Pelvic girdle pain may be one result of these structural changes due to increased forces, and thus it is vital to investigate what factors may or may not contribute to these bone morphology changes. Full article
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22 pages, 359 KiB  
Article
Tackling Paradoxes and Double Binds for a Healthier Workplace: Insights from the Early COVID-19 Responses in Quebec and Ontario
by Daniel Côté, Amelia León, Ai-Thuy Huynh, Jessica Dubé, Ellen MacEachen, Pamela Hopwood, Marie Laberge, Samantha Meyer, Shannon Majowicz, Meghan K. Crouch and Joyceline Amoako
Humans 2025, 5(2), 12; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020012 - 23 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1153
Abstract
The urgency of managing the COVID-19 health crisis in workplaces led to tensions, work overload, and confusion about preventive measures. This study presents a secondary analysis of qualitative data on paradoxes and double binds (PDBs) experienced by precarious essential workers in Canada who [...] Read more.
The urgency of managing the COVID-19 health crisis in workplaces led to tensions, work overload, and confusion about preventive measures. This study presents a secondary analysis of qualitative data on paradoxes and double binds (PDBs) experienced by precarious essential workers in Canada who interacted with the public and their supervisors. Based on 13 interviews from a larger qualitative dataset, we examine how workers navigated public health recommendations and organisational demands during the pandemic. Findings reveal multiple organisational and managerial PDBs—both COVID-19-related and pre-existing—that contributed to psychological distress and compromised well-being. We argue that PDBs represent a significant occupational health hazard for precarious workers. Addressing these structural contradictions through proactive management strategies could help mitigate workplace tensions, reduce stress, and enhance resilience in both crisis situations and regular organisational contexts. Our study contributes to occupational health and safety (OHS) by underscoring the risks posed by PDBs and advocating for strategies to support vulnerable workers in navigating conflicting demands. Full article
18 pages, 319 KiB  
Review
Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology
by Barbara Miller
Humans 2025, 5(2), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020011 - 23 Apr 2025
Viewed by 3321
Abstract
Accepting the premise that sociocultural anthropology is colonialist and Audre Lorde’s maxim that the master’s tools cannot remake the master’s house, I consider the value of a tool from outside the master’s house to reconstruct sociocultural anthropology. Intersectionality, variously known as a theory, [...] Read more.
Accepting the premise that sociocultural anthropology is colonialist and Audre Lorde’s maxim that the master’s tools cannot remake the master’s house, I consider the value of a tool from outside the master’s house to reconstruct sociocultural anthropology. Intersectionality, variously known as a theory, a lens, or a metaphor, is rooted in U.S. Black women’s abolitionism of the mid-nineteenth century, which argued that rights-seeking efforts framed out Black women. The 1970s and 1980s brought increased attention, especially from Black American feminists, to the multiplying effects of the intersections of race, gender, and class. In 1989, the term intersectionality first appeared in print, and a theory was named. Since then, many fields of study and activism have embraced intersectionality. Edward Said posited that radical theories lose their edge when they travel outside their original context. I explore intersectionality’s travels to sociocultural anthropology—its chronology, advocates, and transformations. Although barely visible in much of sociocultural anthropology’s Whitestream, intersectionality has gained not only in numbers but also a stronger voice since its first published appearance in 2001. Nearly two centuries have passed since intersectionality’s origins in U.S. enslavement, but interlocking conditions of inequality pervade the world today, nurturing intersectionality’s radical ethos in sociocultural anthropology. Full article
17 pages, 281 KiB  
Article
The Paradox of Neo-Ruralism in Castilla y León, Spain: Urbanites in the Countryside and Rural Dwellers in the City
by Óscar Fernández-Álvarez, Miguel González-González and Sara Ouali-Fernández
Humans 2025, 5(2), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020010 - 9 Apr 2025
Viewed by 989
Abstract
Sustainability is currently seen as the central unifying idea necessary to mobilize collective responsibility to address the set of serious problems and challenges facing humanity, appealing to cooperation and the defense of the general interest. This article analyzes the social sustainability of the [...] Read more.
Sustainability is currently seen as the central unifying idea necessary to mobilize collective responsibility to address the set of serious problems and challenges facing humanity, appealing to cooperation and the defense of the general interest. This article analyzes the social sustainability of the rural environment, in order to enhance its value beyond the traditional agricultural activities of the territory. Methodologically, it is based on ethnographic fieldwork through participant observation and in-depth interviews, carried out in the rural environment of Castilla y León. This has allowed us to reflect on the strategies that we have tried to articulate, combine, and relate to achieve rural social sustainability. The conclusions show the need to give political content to the rural space and the elements that derive from it. Political, economic, and social problems cannot be solved only from the local level; they need to create alliances beyond the communities to deal with economic structures that seek continuous growth. Full article
16 pages, 239 KiB  
Article
The Racialization of Food: “Indian Corn”, Disgust, and the Development of Underdevelopment in Depression-Era British Honduras
by Christine A. Kray
Humans 2025, 5(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5010009 - 19 Mar 2025
Viewed by 627
Abstract
This paper explores the co-constitution of systems of social distinction, culinary habits, and political economies. During the Depression in British Honduras (Belize), unemployment, hunger, and malnutrition ignited panic, unrest, and uprising. At the same time, agents of a mahogany company and the colonial [...] Read more.
This paper explores the co-constitution of systems of social distinction, culinary habits, and political economies. During the Depression in British Honduras (Belize), unemployment, hunger, and malnutrition ignited panic, unrest, and uprising. At the same time, agents of a mahogany company and the colonial government displaced an entire Maya farming community. Why was Maya farming not considered a pillar of the colony’s economy? For more than a century, colonial administrators had made scarce attempts to stimulate domestic food production and distribution, and stimulating corn production was not even considered. Corn had become racialized, called “Indian corn”, and was considered disgusting, unhealthy, and the cause of high Indian mortality rates. A visceral disgust for corn was hard to disentangle from British disgust for Indians more generally. The racialization of corn emerged alongside and reinforced colonial economic policies of structural underdevelopment, all of which ensured that when Belize City residents were standing in food lines, the abundant harvests of Indian corn were nowhere within reach. Full article
37 pages, 2181 KiB  
Article
Diet, DNA, and the Mesolithic–Neolithic Transition in Western Scotland
by Catriona Pickard, Elizabeth Greenberg, Emma Smith, Andy Barlow and Clive Bonsall
Humans 2025, 5(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5010008 - 17 Mar 2025
Viewed by 2428
Abstract
In this paper, we revisit the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition in western Scotland and the links between early European farmers and middens in light of new aDNA, radiocarbon, and stable isotopic evidence. New carbon and nitrogen stable isotopic data for food sources (plant and animal [...] Read more.
In this paper, we revisit the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition in western Scotland and the links between early European farmers and middens in light of new aDNA, radiocarbon, and stable isotopic evidence. New carbon and nitrogen stable isotopic data for food sources (plant and animal remains) from a Mesolithic site are presented, and dietary FRUITS models are recalculated based on these data. We also respond to recent criticisms of the Bayesian approach to diet reconstruction. Results support the view that Neolithic people had at most a minimal contribution of marine foods in their diet and also point to a dual population model of transition in western Scotland. A significant aspect of the transition in coastal western Scotland is the co-occurrence of Neolithic human remains with shell-midden deposits, which appears to contradict stable isotopic evidence indicating a minimal contribution of marine resources to the diet of early farming communities in the region. Finally, we highlight the need for further research to fully address these issues, including (1) targeted isotopic analyses of potential plant and animal resources, (2) single-entity radiocarbon and ZooMS analyses of animal bones and artefacts from shell middens, and (3) further aDNA analyses of the remains of Late Mesolithic and Neolithic people. Full article
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14 pages, 246 KiB  
Article
Montreal’s Community Organizations and Their Approach to Integration: A System Within a Dual System
by Ariane Le Moing
Humans 2025, 5(1), 7; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5010007 - 6 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1133
Abstract
This article, based on systems thinking, explores how community organizations in Montreal providing newcomers support through the various stages of their settlement process operate within a local municipal system and a broader provincial system, both promoting integration and intercultural relations. On a local [...] Read more.
This article, based on systems thinking, explores how community organizations in Montreal providing newcomers support through the various stages of their settlement process operate within a local municipal system and a broader provincial system, both promoting integration and intercultural relations. On a local scale, the City of Montreal has set itself the goal of raising public awareness of the benefits of cultural diversity and wishes to encourage positive interactions in the public space. For those interviewed during our research, this municipal model of integration does not necessarily align with Quebec’s unique and unofficial integration model, interculturalism, which can be perceived as a political project supporting the French-speaking majority’s interests and which may seem incompatible with the social justice values espoused by community organizations. This article is based on verbatim excerpts gathered from individual and group in-depth interviews conducted with 37 community workers in the spring of 2023. Full article
11 pages, 507 KiB  
Article
The Applicability of the Demirjian and Willems Standards to Age Estimation of 6–9-Year-Old Portuguese Children
by Ivo Vieira, Maria Lurdes Pereira and Inês Morais Caldas
Humans 2025, 5(1), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5010006 - 28 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1059
Abstract
This study evaluates the applicability of Demirjian and Willems’ methods for age estimation in Portuguese children aged 6–9 years based on orthopantomographs (OPGs). The main objective was to compare the precision of both methods in estimating chronological age (CA). This study analyzed 160 [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the applicability of Demirjian and Willems’ methods for age estimation in Portuguese children aged 6–9 years based on orthopantomographs (OPGs). The main objective was to compare the precision of both methods in estimating chronological age (CA). This study analyzed 160 OPGs, equally distributed by sex, and the dental age (DA) was calculated twice, using both methodologies. The findings reveal that Demirjian’s method consistently overestimated the chronological age by an average of 1.47 years for males and 1.45 years for females. Similarly, the Willems method also overestimated the age but to a lesser extent, with mean differences of 1.18 years for males and 0.91 years for females. Statistical analysis confirmed that both methods significantly overestimate age, with the most considerable discrepancies observed in 8-year-old individuals. Despite the Willems method providing slightly more accurate results, neither method was reliable, particularly for male subjects. This study highlights the need for further refinement of these methods, considering their tendency to overestimate age, especially in specific age groups. This research improves age estimation techniques in forensic and clinical settings, especially within the Portuguese pediatric population. Full article
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42 pages, 583 KiB  
Review
The Origin of Human Theory-of-Mind
by Teresa Bejarano
Humans 2025, 5(1), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5010005 - 12 Feb 2025
Viewed by 2147
Abstract
Is there a qualitative difference between apes’ and humans ‘ability to estimate others’ mental states’, a.k.a. ‘Theory-of-Mind’? After opting for the idea that expectations are empty profiles that recognize a particular content when it arrives, I apply the same description to ‘vicarious expectations’—very [...] Read more.
Is there a qualitative difference between apes’ and humans ‘ability to estimate others’ mental states’, a.k.a. ‘Theory-of-Mind’? After opting for the idea that expectations are empty profiles that recognize a particular content when it arrives, I apply the same description to ‘vicarious expectations’—very probably present in apes. Thus, (empty) vicarious expectations and one’s (full) contents are distinguished without needing meta-representation. Then, I propose: First, vicarious expectations are enough to support apes’ Theory-of-Mind (including ‘spontaneous altruism’). Second, since vicarious expectations require a profile previously built in the subject that activates them, this subject cannot activate any vicarious expectation of mental states that are intrinsically impossible for him. Third, your mental states that think of me as a distal individual are intrinsically impossible states for me, and therefore, to estimate them, I must estimate your mental contents. This ability (the original nucleus of the human Theory-of-Mind) is essential in the human lifestyle. It is involved in unpleasant and pleasant self-conscious emotions, which respectively contribute to ‘social order’ and to cultural innovations. More basically, it makes possible human (prelinguistic or linguistic) communication, since it originally made possible the understanding of others’ mental states as states that are addressed to me, and that are therefore impossible for me. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers Defining Humans)
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