Next, we measured some phenotypic traits, and found that social dominance (i.e. dominance hierarchy type and degree of dominance behavior) consistently accounted for some phenotypic variation in all outcome measures, while cage-identity accounted for phenotypic variation in some measures but virtually ...
About this entry Cite this entry (2021). Social Hierarchy. In: Shackelford, T.K., Weekes-Shackelford, V.A. (eds) Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19650-3_304908 Download citation .RIS .ENW .BIB DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1...
The clearest non-human analogue to social status is thedominance hierarchy, found (most famously) in chickens, chimps, and wolves, but also in many other social species including fish and even insects. Sometimes these hierarchies are linear: alpha dominates beta, beta dominates gamma, and so on...
Don’t make the mistake of trying to climb the hierarchy and become alpha that way. If your goal is to be the alpha male of a group, form your own group. If you don’t know how to do that yet, you’re not alpha material yet. Go study people more, or perfect your skill sets ...
The power of lower frequency bands—delta to alpha—were correlated with each other and anti-correlated with gamma power. The high-to-low-power ratio (HLR) provided a useful measure to understand LFP changes along the change of behavioural and locomotive states. The HLR during huddled conditions...
Social hierarchy has also been explored in settings where dominance is established through unstaged social interactions that occur on an ongoing basis (e.g. Blanchard et al., 1995, Blanchard et al., 2001). A low position in the social (and economic/resource) hierarchy appears to be stressful...
$${{\rm{sustain}}}_{{it}}={\rm{\alpha }}+{\beta {internet}}_{{it}}+{\gamma Z}_{{it}}+{\mu }_{i}+{\eta }_{t}+{\varepsilon }_{{it}}$$ (1) whereiandtrepresent province and year, respectively. ‘Sustain’ denotes China’s sustainable improvement variable, while ‘inter...
Remarkably, all of these changes are reversible, and maleA. burtonican move up and down the social hierarchy multiple times throughout life. The stable-yet-reversible nature ofA. burtonisocial status resembles a form of metaplasticity whereby changes in neural function and behavior are dynamically ...
The first type of amalgamation is rather typical, not only in social but also in biological evolution. There is, however, a major difference between the two kinds of evolution. Any large society usually consists of a whole hierarchy of social systems. For example, ...
Don’t make the mistake of trying to climb the hierarchy and become alpha that way. If your goal is to be the alpha male of a group, form your own group. If you don’t know how to do that yet, you’re not alpha material yet. Go study people more, or perfect your skill sets ...