Exploring how social structures and political forces become biologically embedded in human beings through political biology and epigenetics.
Explore the revolutionary collaboration between biology and social sciences revealing how our social experiences directly influence our genetic expression.
Explore how epigenetics bridges biology and society, revealing how experiences reshape gene expression through DNA methylation, histone modifications, and non-coding RNAs.
Exploring whether epigenetics can become a biosocial science that integrates social contexts into biological research, responding to Chiapperino and Paneni.