Despite the urgency of this issue, AI still struggles to represent social life. This article presents a comprehensive agent-based model that investigates status-power dynamics in groups. Kemper’s sociological status–power theory of social relationships, and a literature review on school children in middle youth, is its basis. The model allows us to investigate causation of the near-ubiquitous phenomenon that females have lower social status on average than males. Possible causes included in the model are children’s dispositional traits (kindness, beauty, and physical power), schoolyard culture (social acceptability of fighting), behavioural strategy (amount of rough-and-tumble play) and the balance between public and dyadic sources of statu...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
The papers presented in this dissertation aim to refine our understanding of human status psychology...
This paper urges that if we wish to give social intelligence to our agents, it pays to look at how w...
Despite the urgency of this issue, AI still struggles to represent social life. This article present...
This paper describes an agent-based model to investigate the origins of gender differences in social...
This paper describes an agent-based model to investigate the origins of gender differences in social...
This is a conceptual exploration of the work of some<br/>eminent social scientists thought to be ame...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
Partial funding for Open Access provided by the UMD Libraries' Open Access Publishing Fund.Children’...
The papers presented in this dissertation aim to refine our understanding of human status psychology...
Literature on aggression often suggests that individual deficiencies, such as social incompe-tence, ...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
The papers presented in this dissertation aim to refine our understanding of human status psychology...
This paper urges that if we wish to give social intelligence to our agents, it pays to look at how w...
Despite the urgency of this issue, AI still struggles to represent social life. This article present...
This paper describes an agent-based model to investigate the origins of gender differences in social...
This paper describes an agent-based model to investigate the origins of gender differences in social...
This is a conceptual exploration of the work of some<br/>eminent social scientists thought to be ame...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status beliefs link social distinctions, such as gender and race, to assumptions about competence an...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
Partial funding for Open Access provided by the UMD Libraries' Open Access Publishing Fund.Children’...
The papers presented in this dissertation aim to refine our understanding of human status psychology...
Literature on aggression often suggests that individual deficiencies, such as social incompe-tence, ...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
Status is an important aspect of social life that affects people from the day they are born until th...
The papers presented in this dissertation aim to refine our understanding of human status psychology...
This paper urges that if we wish to give social intelligence to our agents, it pays to look at how w...