Every human society includes social hierarchies-- relationships between individuals and groups of unequal rank or status. Recent research has shown that even preverbal infants represent hierarchical relationships, expecting larger agents and agents from larger groups to win dominance contests. However, to successfully navigate social hierarchies, infants must also integrate information about social rank into their own behavior, such as when deciding which individuals to approach and which to avoid. Here we demonstrate that two-year-old children (ages 21-31 months) preferred novel dominant agents to subordinates. That is, by the age of 21 months, toddlers not only use phylogenetically stable cues to predict the winner of dominance contests, ...
Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instanc...
International audienceRecent research has shown that young children rely on social cuesto evaluate t...
Humans are social animals living in groups and tending to organize themselves hierarchically. This s...
Every human society includes social hierarchies-- relationships between individuals and groups of un...
Social hierarchies occur across human societies, so all humans must navigate them. Infants can detec...
For humans and other social species, social status matters: it determines who wins access to contest...
International audienceAbstractNavigating the social world requires evaluating how others behave, com...
Human infants face the formidable challenge of learning the structure of their social environment. P...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman infants face the formidable challenge of learning the structure ...
What are the origins of humans’ capacity to represent social rela- tions? We approached this questio...
Social hierarchies are ubiquitous in all human relations since birth, but little is known about how ...
Social hierarchies exist throughout the animal kingdom, including among humans. Our daily interactio...
Navigating the complexities of social relationships is a fundamental task that many animals face thr...
This is the publisher's version, which is also available electronically from http://www.jstor.org/st...
Humans routinely monitor social interactions to learn about the relational make-up of their groups a...
Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instanc...
International audienceRecent research has shown that young children rely on social cuesto evaluate t...
Humans are social animals living in groups and tending to organize themselves hierarchically. This s...
Every human society includes social hierarchies-- relationships between individuals and groups of un...
Social hierarchies occur across human societies, so all humans must navigate them. Infants can detec...
For humans and other social species, social status matters: it determines who wins access to contest...
International audienceAbstractNavigating the social world requires evaluating how others behave, com...
Human infants face the formidable challenge of learning the structure of their social environment. P...
Item does not contain fulltextHuman infants face the formidable challenge of learning the structure ...
What are the origins of humans’ capacity to represent social rela- tions? We approached this questio...
Social hierarchies are ubiquitous in all human relations since birth, but little is known about how ...
Social hierarchies exist throughout the animal kingdom, including among humans. Our daily interactio...
Navigating the complexities of social relationships is a fundamental task that many animals face thr...
This is the publisher's version, which is also available electronically from http://www.jstor.org/st...
Humans routinely monitor social interactions to learn about the relational make-up of their groups a...
Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instanc...
International audienceRecent research has shown that young children rely on social cuesto evaluate t...
Humans are social animals living in groups and tending to organize themselves hierarchically. This s...