← Back to context Comment by lanstin 2 years ago Which is the model that matches acceleration of death rates as we age. 3 comments lanstin Reply TZubiri 2 years ago The reduction of death rates which is not due to panaceas but to fixing specific causes of death, one by one, yes. lanstin 2 years ago I meant more like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7272078/Like it breaks down at an exponentially increasing rate. Hard to keep up with that. TZubiri 2 years ago Oh interesting. Yes I agree that such a model of accumulating damage would show a logarithmic scaling with life expectancy.
TZubiri 2 years ago The reduction of death rates which is not due to panaceas but to fixing specific causes of death, one by one, yes. lanstin 2 years ago I meant more like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7272078/Like it breaks down at an exponentially increasing rate. Hard to keep up with that. TZubiri 2 years ago Oh interesting. Yes I agree that such a model of accumulating damage would show a logarithmic scaling with life expectancy.
lanstin 2 years ago I meant more like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7272078/Like it breaks down at an exponentially increasing rate. Hard to keep up with that. TZubiri 2 years ago Oh interesting. Yes I agree that such a model of accumulating damage would show a logarithmic scaling with life expectancy.
TZubiri 2 years ago Oh interesting. Yes I agree that such a model of accumulating damage would show a logarithmic scaling with life expectancy.
The reduction of death rates which is not due to panaceas but to fixing specific causes of death, one by one, yes.
I meant more like this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7272078/
Like it breaks down at an exponentially increasing rate. Hard to keep up with that.
Oh interesting. Yes I agree that such a model of accumulating damage would show a logarithmic scaling with life expectancy.