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How dominance traits are the same in humans and nonhuman primates Above, I identified a host of dominance traits in nonhuman primate species. But just because traits have been labeled the same way does not make them the same thing – the so-called “jingle fallacy” – particularly when one is crossing species boundaries (Zuckerman, 1992 ).
Oct 31, 2023 · The continuity of social life observed between non-human primates and humans is fundamental for understanding the formation of human society in the course of evolution as well as its further social evolution. This paper aims specifically at studying dominance styles and variability of social relationships in non-human primates and humans.
Jan 10, 2022 · Dominance captures behavioural patterns found in social hierarchies that arise from agonistic interactions in which some individuals coercively exploit their control over costs and benefits to extract deference from others, often through aggression, threats and/or intimidation. Accumulating evidence points to its importance in humans and its ...
May 19, 2014 · Watching another individual shift gaze to an object or location in space typically evokes a gaze shift, as well as a shift in covert attention, in the same direction, in humans and other nonhuman primates (Shepherd, 2010). This gaze-following response depends upon neural circuits involved in decoding where another individual is looking, and circuits that orient attention and plan gaze shifts.
- Steve W. C. Chang, Lauren J. N. Brent, Geoffrey K. Adams, Jeffrey T. Klein, John M. Pearson, Karli K...
- 2014/05/19
- 2013
munication. This approach incorporates two strategies. First, the behavioral traits of present-day primates are used to infer those of the evolutionary ancestors shared by all primates, including humans (Mazur, 1973; Napier & Napier, 1967). Traits that are present among numerous nonhuman primate species are expected to be found
- Caroline F. Keating
- 1985
Feb 14, 2017 · In nonhuman primates, dominance hierarchies represent one dimension of group social organization. The dominance hierarchy is a clearly discernible ranking order of group individuals, determined by the outcomes of aggressive and submissive (together, agonistic) social interactions that create asymmetrical dominance relationships between individuals.
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Dec 14, 2019 · Chapter 5. Dominance, Power, and Politics in Nonhuman. and Human Primates. David P. Watts. As long as politics is the shadow cast on society by big business, attenuation of the shadow. will not ...