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Jan 10, 2022 · From an evolutionary point of view, our baseline expectation should be that humans probably inherited some form of dominance psychology from our shared ancestry with chimpanzees and bonobos, whose social life is strongly shaped by dominance hierarchies [8,19,70–73] Dominance rank is associated among them with both shorter-term social influence, including access to food and mating ...
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From an evolutionary point of view, our baseline expectation...
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opportunities for anti-dominance behaviours from...
- Why Hens
(a) The pecking order is established. Thorlief...
- A Dynamic Model of Reproductive Skew
At the same time, the dominant may be unable to exclude...
- DomArchive
2. The dominance archive dataset. The archive contains 436...
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Redhead D, Cheng J, Driver C, Foulsham T and O'Gorman R...
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Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Henrich@fas.harvard.edu ORCid: 0000-0002-5012-0065 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
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May 3, 2022 · 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.
Jan 1, 2021 · Dominance in humans is much more complex than the primate cases described above and is the product not only of direct physical contests between individuals (‘physical dominance’) but of variables such as prestige, group membership (e.g., based on gender or ethnicity), and situation within large-scale “formal hierarchies” such as socioeconomic status.
Jan 10, 2022 · In total, viewing dominance rank as a trajectory that unfolds over the life course will reveal typical patterns of dominance trajectories, potential alternative strategies to maximizing fitness in hierarchical societies, and the role of social mobility in the evolution of status-seeking (or status-preserving, e.g. ) behaviour.
May 1, 2019 · Dominant individuals, by contrast, attain their dominance via physical or verbal coercion and threat, and so dominance should be unrelated to knowledge. Cheng et al . [ 1 ] compared prestige and dominance, but in a task—choosing items to use on the moon—which was not clearly related to a participant's prior or general knowledge.
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Feb 28, 2022 · Finally, because human-specific factors such as norms and coalitions may place bounds on purely coercive status-attainment strategies, we end by considering key situations and contexts that increase the likelihood for dominance status to coexist alongside prestige status within the same individual, including how: (i) institutional power and authority tend to elicit dominance; (ii) dominance ...