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  1. Jan 10, 2022 · For the reasons we have described, prestige may often be more important than dominance in many contexts, but as we have reviewed, dominance continues to play an important role. Studies of non-human primates use multiple measures of dominance, such as resource control after competitive bouts, or directionality of aggression and formal dominance signals.

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      For the reasons we have described, prestige may often be...

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      The concept of dominance plays an important role in animal...

    • Why Hens

      Thorlief Schjelderup-Ebbe's seminal paper on the ‘pecking’...

    • A Dynamic Model of Reproductive Skew

      Chen Zeng T, Cheng J and Henrich J (2022) Dominance in...

  2. Jan 10, 2022 · As a result, many gaps remain in our understanding of how and why dominance hierarchies change over time and what impacts these changes have for of animal societies. Here, we highlight these gaps, discuss the challenges to addressing them, and suggest solutions to these problems and promising avenues for future research .

  3. Dominance may be best divided into two subscales: sociable dominance and aggressive dominance (Kalma et al., 1993). Individuals who score higher on sociable dominance tend to have better peer relations and are more socially oriented in their behavior, while those who score high on aggressive dominance are more selfish and exhibit more antisocial behaviors (see Table 2 ).

  4. 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
  5. In a recent theoretical model of hierarchy formation, Kawakatsu et al. highlight the importance of this process: interactions (or ‘endorsements’) produce stable hierarchies through social reinforcement, and interactions with better connected individuals provide greater contributions to an individual’s relative status than with those who are less connected.

  6. Jan 10, 2022 · Given the accumulating evidence that dominance is influenced, in part, by self-organizing social dynamics, additional research will be important to understand both the behaviours that underlie these patterns as well as the circumstances where self-organizing social dynamics are more versus less important.

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  8. Jan 6, 2011 · Abstract. This article explores how dominance hierarchies develop their typical structures. It tackles a number of questions, for example: how is it that different groups develop the same kinds of hierarchy structures, even when the structures arise spontaneously, without being imposed by central authority; what mechanisms generate these hierarchy structures; or whether an understanding the ...

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