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      • 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.
  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.

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      Dominance captures behavioural patterns found in social...

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      Dominance in humans Tian Chen Zeng1, ... (iii) cumulative...

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      Moreover, dominance refers to the capacity to make another...

  2. 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.

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  3. Jun 29, 2023 · Nature Human Behaviour - The authors show that social hierarchies have a pyramidal structure across species. From infancy, humans use this assumption to infer unobserved dominance relations.

  4. Jan 10, 2022 · In a dominance hierarchy, individuals are arrayed in a line from most to least dominant; individuals are dominant to those below them in the hierarchy and subordinate to those above them in the hierarchy.

  5. 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.

  6. Jan 10, 2022 · Intergenerational mobility measures the extent to which parental dominance rank predicts offspring dominance, whereas intragenerational mobility describes movements of individuals in the hierarchy over their lifetimes.

  7. Jan 6, 2011 · We begin this exploration of these questions in a way that is unusual for sociology: we first look at theoretical models for the explanation of dominance hierarchies (‘pecking orders’) in small groups of animals, before considering hierarchies in small groups of humans.

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