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- Thus, dominance can be viewed as a behavior or personality trait that leads to inequalities in power among group members, and thereby differentiates status.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5494206/
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.
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Dominance captures behavioural patterns found in social...
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the importance of dominance in structuring social rank in...
- Why Hens
Researchers have expressed repeated frustration with the...
- A Dynamic Model of Reproductive Skew
When the possibility of acceding to dominant status is taken...
- DomArchive
2. The dominance archive dataset. The archive contains 436...
- Voice Pitch Predicts Reproductive Success in Male Hunter-Gatherers
2005 Mating context and menstrual phase affect women's...
- Prestige and Dominance-Based Hierarchies Exist in Naturally Occurring Human Groups, But Are Unrelated to Task-Specific Knowledge
1. Introduction. Prestige and dominance are said to be ‘two...
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Social groups across species rapidly self-organize into hierarchies, where members vary in their level of power, influence, skill, or dominance. In this review we explore the nature of social hierarchies and the traits associated with status in both humans and nonhuman primates, and how status varies across development in humans.
The dominance behavioral system (DBS) can be conceptualized as a biologically-based system which guides dominance motivation, dominant and subordinate behavior, and responsivity to perceptions of power and subordination.
We then review empirical evidence for its continued importance in human groups, including the effects of dominance rank on measurable outcomes such as social influence and reproductive fitness (independently of prestige), evidence for a specialized dominance psychology, and evidence for gender-specific effects.
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Jan 10, 2022 · A major insight from the last century of dominance research is that dominance relationships are influenced by the social context in which they operate—that is, dyadic dominance relationships are not determined in a vacuum, but are instead influenced by other dyadic relationships [77–79].
Across species, social hierarchies are often governed by dominance relations. In humans, where there are multiple culturally valued axes of distinction, social hierarchies can take a variety of forms and need not rest on dominance relations.
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Aug 8, 2020 · Dominant individuals are often most influential in their social groups, affecting movement, opinion, and performance across species and contexts. Yet, behavioral traits like aggression, intimidation, and coercion, which are associated with and in many cases define dominance, can be socially aversive.