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  1. 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 ...

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      Dominance captures behavioural patterns found in social...

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      (a) The pecking order is established. Thorlief...

  2. One might expect dominance motivation to intensify reactivity to subordination, and several studies have highlighted the importance of dominance motivation. In one study, implicit measures of dominance motivation were found to predict more anxiety in response to rigged negative social feedback (Fodor & Wick, 2009). Although the study did not ...

  3. dominance emerges in men and women, and how it interacts with institutions, culture, and forms of prestige status. Theorizing dominance Aggression in group-living animals is often stably patterned, with one member of any given pair tending to be the aggressor toward the other individual, who does not reciprocate,

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  4. May 3, 2022 · Abstract: Dominance is the aspect of social hierarchy that arises from agonistic interactions involving actual aggression or threats and intimidation. Accumulating evidence points to its importance in humans and its separation from prestige–an alternate mechanism in which status arises from competence or benefit-generation ability. In this ...

  5. Jan 10, 2022 · Dominance rank can also be acquired through conventions. In societies with convention-based dominance, individuals have unique attributes that single them out as the next dominant, (e.g. age, tenure in a group or maternal rank) without reflecting intrinsic characteristics that allow individuals to win contests [73,74]. For example, some social ...

  6. Jan 1, 2021 · Human dominance in face-to-face dyads and groups is situated within a structure of “official hierarchies” such as governments and socioeconomic strata (see Mazur 2005 for a review). These broad, formal, ranks organize access to resources, power, and influence, with a small number of “leaders” atop a series of levels of decreasing status and increasing numbers.

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  8. Jan 10, 2022 · Abstract. Dominance captures behavioural patterns found in social hierarchies that arise from agonistic interactions in which some individuals coercively exploit their control over costs and ...

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