1. Social inequality is a consistent feature of animal societies, often manifesting as dominance hierarchies, in which each individual is characterized by a dominance rank denoting its place in the network of competitive relationships among group‐members. Most studies treat dominance hierarchies as static entities despite their true longitudinal, and sometimes highly dynamic, nature. 2. To guide study of the dynamics of dominance, we propose the concept of a longitudinal hierarchy: the characterization of a single, latent hierarchy and it's dynamics over time. Longitudinal hierarchies describe the hierarchy position (r) and dynamics (∆) associated with each individual as a property of its interaction data, the perio...
Social dominance hierarchies are widespread, but little is known about the mechanisms that produce n...
The standard approach in accounting for hierarchical differentiation in biology and the social scien...
The strength of dominance hierarchy in a group of animals needs to be quantitatively measured since ...
1. Social inequality is a consistent feature of animal societies, often manifesting as dominance hie...
The widespread existence of dominance hierarchies has been a central puzzle in social evolution, yet...
The development of numerical methods for inferring social ranks has resulted in an overwhelming arra...
Animals that live in groups commonly form themselves into dominance hierarchies which are used to al...
Linear dominance hierarchies, which are common in social animals, can profoundly influence access to...
Dominance hierarchies are group-level properties that emerge from the aggression of individuals. Alt...
Although social hierarchies are recognized as dynamic systems, they are typically treated as static ...
Highlights ► Elo-rating generates reliable dominance hierarchies and circumvents drawbacks of est...
In studies of animal behaviour investigators correlate dominance with all kinds of behavioural varia...
In the analysis of social dominance in groups of animals, linearity has been used by many researcher...
Many mammalian societies are structured by dominance hierarchies, and an individual's position withi...
The widespread existence of dominance hierarchies has been a central puzzle in social evolution, yet...
Social dominance hierarchies are widespread, but little is known about the mechanisms that produce n...
The standard approach in accounting for hierarchical differentiation in biology and the social scien...
The strength of dominance hierarchy in a group of animals needs to be quantitatively measured since ...
1. Social inequality is a consistent feature of animal societies, often manifesting as dominance hie...
The widespread existence of dominance hierarchies has been a central puzzle in social evolution, yet...
The development of numerical methods for inferring social ranks has resulted in an overwhelming arra...
Animals that live in groups commonly form themselves into dominance hierarchies which are used to al...
Linear dominance hierarchies, which are common in social animals, can profoundly influence access to...
Dominance hierarchies are group-level properties that emerge from the aggression of individuals. Alt...
Although social hierarchies are recognized as dynamic systems, they are typically treated as static ...
Highlights ► Elo-rating generates reliable dominance hierarchies and circumvents drawbacks of est...
In studies of animal behaviour investigators correlate dominance with all kinds of behavioural varia...
In the analysis of social dominance in groups of animals, linearity has been used by many researcher...
Many mammalian societies are structured by dominance hierarchies, and an individual's position withi...
The widespread existence of dominance hierarchies has been a central puzzle in social evolution, yet...
Social dominance hierarchies are widespread, but little is known about the mechanisms that produce n...
The standard approach in accounting for hierarchical differentiation in biology and the social scien...
The strength of dominance hierarchy in a group of animals needs to be quantitatively measured since ...