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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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      evidence for dominance in humans, drawing evidence from...

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

  2. Challenges to dominance in humans Although we have every reason to suspect that the evolutionary processes and incentives identified by the logic of the models described above will apply to humans, identifying and studying dominance in our species poses particular challenges due to the influence of both

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  3. Oct 31, 2019 · How humans and other social species form social hierarchies is one of the oldest puzzles of the behavioral and biological sciences. Considerable evidence now indicates that in humans social stratification is principally based jointly on dominance (coercive capacity based on strength, threat, and intimidation) and prestige (persuasive capacity based on skills, abilities, and knowledge).

    • Joey T Cheng
    • 2020
  4. 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. Consequently, humans navigate multiple domains of status, i.e. relative standing. Importantly, while these hierarchies may be constructed from dyadic interactions, they are often ...

  5. 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 ...

  6. 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.

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  8. Jan 10, 2022 · These models make predictions about how dominance relationships might change under different perturbations, such as the removal of the dominant individual, changes in physical condition, social mobility among other group-members or stochastic outcomes of interactions that do not align with the dominance relationship.

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