Age and gender are two important factors that play crucial roles in the way organisms allocate their social effort. In this study, we analyse a large mobile phone dataset to explore the way life history influences human sociality and the way social networks are structured. Our results indicate that these aspects of human behaviour are strongly related to age and gender such that younger individuals have more contacts and, among them, males more than females. However, the rate of decrease in the number of contacts with age differs between males and females, such that there is a reversal in the number of contacts around the late 30s. We suggest that this pattern can be attributed to the difference in reproductive investments that are made by ...
Although cooperative social networks are considered key to human evolution, emphasis has usually bee...
<div><p>The ability to create lasting, trust-based friendships makes it possible for humans to form ...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENIn this brief review, we discuss some recent findings of human ...
Age and gender are two important factors that play crucial roles in the way organisms allocate their...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENAge and gender are two important factors that play crucial role...
Social networks based on dyadic relationships are fundamentally important for understanding of human...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENIn human relations individuals’ gender and age play a key role ...
We analyze a large-scale mobile phone call dataset containing information on the age, gender, and bi...
<div><p>Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social rela...
Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social relations. W...
Humans are social animals and the interpersonal bonds formed between them are crucial for their deve...
Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social relations. W...
Mobile phone communication is a source of information for studying human behavioural patterns. A mob...
Social networks require active relationship maintenance if they are to be kept at a constant level o...
Although cooperative social networks are considered key to human evolution, emphasis has usually bee...
Although cooperative social networks are considered key to human evolution, emphasis has usually bee...
<div><p>The ability to create lasting, trust-based friendships makes it possible for humans to form ...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENIn this brief review, we discuss some recent findings of human ...
Age and gender are two important factors that play crucial roles in the way organisms allocate their...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENAge and gender are two important factors that play crucial role...
Social networks based on dyadic relationships are fundamentally important for understanding of human...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENIn human relations individuals’ gender and age play a key role ...
We analyze a large-scale mobile phone call dataset containing information on the age, gender, and bi...
<div><p>Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social rela...
Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social relations. W...
Humans are social animals and the interpersonal bonds formed between them are crucial for their deve...
Each stage of the human life course is characterised by a distinctive pattern of social relations. W...
Mobile phone communication is a source of information for studying human behavioural patterns. A mob...
Social networks require active relationship maintenance if they are to be kept at a constant level o...
Although cooperative social networks are considered key to human evolution, emphasis has usually bee...
Although cooperative social networks are considered key to human evolution, emphasis has usually bee...
<div><p>The ability to create lasting, trust-based friendships makes it possible for humans to form ...
| openaire: EC/H2020/662725/EU//IBSENIn this brief review, we discuss some recent findings of human ...