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Jan 10, 2022 · Although the traditional static approach has produced valuable insight into the role of dominance in social systems, it side-steps challenges associated with the dynamics of dominance, i.e. changes in dominance hierarchies over time. 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.
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Although the traditional static approach has produced...
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stand causes and consequences of position in the dominance...
- Why Hens
(a) The pecking order is established. Thorlief...
- Biological Sciences
In nearly 100 years of research on dominance, scientists...
- A Dynamic Model of Reproductive Skew
When the possibility of acceding to dominant status is taken...
- A Comparison of Dominance Rank Metrics Reveals Multiple Competitive Landscapes in an Animal Society
(a) Assumptions of simple ordinal rank and proportional...
- Social Hierarchies and Social Networks in Humans
Here, we define social hierarchies as fundamentally latent...
- Neural Systems That Facilitate The Representation of Social Rank
Dominance hierarchies are an important form of social...
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Mar 13, 2024 · Beneficial reversals of dominance reduce the costs of genetic trade-offs and can enable selection to maintain genetic variation for fitness. Beneficial dominance reversals are characterized by the beneficial allele for a given context (e.g. habitat, developmental stage, trait or sex) being dominant in that context but recessive where deleterious.
- 10.1098/rspb.2023.2816
- 2024/03
- Proc Biol Sci. 2024 Mar; 291(2018): 20232816.
Jan 10, 2022 · More recent work has shown that transitive inference occurs in many social species, including primates, birds, fishes and paper wasps [60–62]. Transitive inference may be favoured in social species with linear dominance hierarchies because it allows animals to keep track of dominance relationships while minimizing direct conflict.
Abstract. Social dominance theory was developed to account for why societies producing surplus take and maintain the form of group-based dominance hierarchies, in which at least one socially-constructed group has more power than another, and in which men are more powerful than women and adults more powerful than children.
- Felicia Pratto, Andrew L. Stewart, Fouad Bou Zeineddine
- 2013
Feb 8, 2021 · While we agree with Moreland that many processes occur differently in groups of three or more from how they occur in dyads, we also agree with Williams that many similar processes occur in dyads and groups, such as social facilitation and loafing, cooperation, and leadership. Thus, we contend that theories of dyadic interaction, such as those that examine power and dominance, have much to ...
- Norah E. Dunbar, Bradley Dorn, Mohemmad Hansia, Becky Ford, Matt Giles, Miriam Metzger, Judee K. Bur...
- 2021
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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Aug 8, 2020 · Therefore, we preformed network randomization (i.e., node randomization by assigning the dominance status to an individual that was randomly drawn from the group, n = 1,000) for each of the six “routine social context” groups to construct null models in which social dominance is detached from the respective response variable . For each randomization of the six networks and for each ...