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      The influence of network mortality experience on nonnumeric response concerning expected family size: evidence from a Nepalese mountain village.

      Demography
      Adult, Data Collection, methods, Family Characteristics, ethnology, Fertility, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Infant, Infant Mortality, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Nepal, Questionnaires, Rural Population, statistics & numerical data, trends, Social Support, Survival Analysis, Uncertainty, Women, education, psychology

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          Abstract

          This article investigates the effects of sociometric network members' self-reported experiences with infant mortality on nonnumeric responses regarding expected family size among women in a small Nepalese community. The hypotheses tested include (1) that uncertainty about child survival, measured as average infant mortality across social networks, increases the likelihood of a nonnumeric response and (2) that this effect will be stronger when there is less variance in infant mortality experience within women a networks. The results suggest that nonnumeric response may be related to uncertainty about mortality derived through social learning.

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