Multilevel (or modular) societies are a distinct type of primate social system whose key features are single-male-multifemale, core units nested within larger social bands. They are not equivalent to fission-fusion societies, with the latter referring to routine variability in associations, either on an individual or subunit level. The purpose of this review is to characterize and operationalize multilevel societies and to outline their putative evolutionary origins. Multilevel societies are prevalent in three primate clades: papionins, Asian colobines, and hominins. For each clade, we portray the most parsimonious phylogenetic pathway leading to a modular system and then review and discuss likely socioecological conditions promoting the es...
The structure and dynamics of primate social groups are shaped by the social relationships of its me...
# The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Resear...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
Multilevel (or modular) societies are a distinct type of primate social system whose key features ar...
Modular societies are structurally characterized by nuclear one-male units (OMUs, or harems) embedde...
Several mammalian species exhibit complex, nested social organizations, termed multi-level or modula...
Researchers have described multilevel societies with one-male, multifemale units (OMUs) forming with...
Modern human societies show hierarchical social modularity (HSM) in which lower-order social units l...
A small number of primate species including snub-nosed monkeys (colobines), geladas (papionins) and ...
Multilevel societies with fission–fusion dynamics—arguably the most complex animal societies—are def...
This study aimed to explore the benefits that individuals gain from group living and the role of kin...
Multilevel societies with fission–fusion dynamics—arguably the most complex animal societies—are def...
There is a very striking difference between even the simplest ethnographically known human societies...
From a Darwinian perspective, both history and environment are causal factors for change in animal s...
Compared with other primates, New World monkeys display relatively limited ecological variability. N...
The structure and dynamics of primate social groups are shaped by the social relationships of its me...
# The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Resear...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...
Multilevel (or modular) societies are a distinct type of primate social system whose key features ar...
Modular societies are structurally characterized by nuclear one-male units (OMUs, or harems) embedde...
Several mammalian species exhibit complex, nested social organizations, termed multi-level or modula...
Researchers have described multilevel societies with one-male, multifemale units (OMUs) forming with...
Modern human societies show hierarchical social modularity (HSM) in which lower-order social units l...
A small number of primate species including snub-nosed monkeys (colobines), geladas (papionins) and ...
Multilevel societies with fission–fusion dynamics—arguably the most complex animal societies—are def...
This study aimed to explore the benefits that individuals gain from group living and the role of kin...
Multilevel societies with fission–fusion dynamics—arguably the most complex animal societies—are def...
There is a very striking difference between even the simplest ethnographically known human societies...
From a Darwinian perspective, both history and environment are causal factors for change in animal s...
Compared with other primates, New World monkeys display relatively limited ecological variability. N...
The structure and dynamics of primate social groups are shaped by the social relationships of its me...
# The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Resear...
The social factors that influence cooperation have remained largely uninvestigated but have the pote...