SummaryDominant individuals report high levels of self-sufficiency, self-esteem, and authoritarianism. The lay stereotype suggests that such individuals ignore information from others, preferring to make their own choices. However, the nonhuman animal literature presents a conflicting view, suggesting that dominant individuals are avid social learners, whereas subordinates focus on learning from private experience. Whether dominant humans are best characterized by the lay stereotype or the animal view is currently unknown. Here, we present a “social dominance paradox”: using self-report scales and computerized tasks, we demonstrate that socially dominant people explicitly value independence, but, paradoxically, in a complex decision-making ...
The hypothesis was examined that, because it is drive-producing, the presence of an audience enhance...
We develop a game theoretic model of conflict and empirically test its predictions to study the emer...
It has often been argued that the spectacular cognitive capacities of humans are the result of selec...
Dominant individuals report high levels of self-sufficiency, self-esteem, and authoritarianism. The ...
Social dominance results when members of a social group vary in their ability to acquire resources i...
Social dominance theory (SDT; Sidanius & Pratto, 1999) hypothesizes that members of subordinate ...
Schmitt, Branscombe and Kappen (2003) and Wilson and Lui (2003) present a persuasive series of studi...
Effects of social learning on mate preferences have been observed in a wide range of animal species,...
The pursuit of social rank is a recurrent and pervasive challenge faced by individuals in all human ...
We investigated the influence of social status on behavior in a modified dictator game (DG). Since t...
In many animal societies, individuals differ consistently in their ability to win agonistic interact...
This study examined whether two established dominance-oriented behaviours, namely, coercive and pros...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
Evolutionary psychology posits an individual's status can be based either on dominance or prestige. ...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
The hypothesis was examined that, because it is drive-producing, the presence of an audience enhance...
We develop a game theoretic model of conflict and empirically test its predictions to study the emer...
It has often been argued that the spectacular cognitive capacities of humans are the result of selec...
Dominant individuals report high levels of self-sufficiency, self-esteem, and authoritarianism. The ...
Social dominance results when members of a social group vary in their ability to acquire resources i...
Social dominance theory (SDT; Sidanius & Pratto, 1999) hypothesizes that members of subordinate ...
Schmitt, Branscombe and Kappen (2003) and Wilson and Lui (2003) present a persuasive series of studi...
Effects of social learning on mate preferences have been observed in a wide range of animal species,...
The pursuit of social rank is a recurrent and pervasive challenge faced by individuals in all human ...
We investigated the influence of social status on behavior in a modified dictator game (DG). Since t...
In many animal societies, individuals differ consistently in their ability to win agonistic interact...
This study examined whether two established dominance-oriented behaviours, namely, coercive and pros...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
Evolutionary psychology posits an individual's status can be based either on dominance or prestige. ...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
The hypothesis was examined that, because it is drive-producing, the presence of an audience enhance...
We develop a game theoretic model of conflict and empirically test its predictions to study the emer...
It has often been argued that the spectacular cognitive capacities of humans are the result of selec...