Understanding the mechanisms responsible for consistent individual differences in behaviour is a recent challenge for behavioural ecology. Although theory is rapidly developing in this area, there are few empirical tests. There are at least two hypotheses to explain why individuals behave differently from one another in a dynamic social environment. The social niche specialization hypothesis proposes that repeated social interactions generate consistent individual differences in social behaviour. The behavioural type hypothesis proposes that an individual's social behaviour reflects its behavioural type. We tested these two hypotheses by manipulating the opportunity for repeated social interactions in groups of three spine stickleback, Gast...
Animal personalities are ubiquitous across the animal kingdom and have been shown both to influence ...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Animal social networks can be extremely complex and are characterized by highly non-random interacti...
Central to this thesis is the investigation of how several factors (e.g. morphology, ecology, and so...
Central to this thesis is the investigation of how several factors (e.g. morphology, ecology, and so...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
1. Animals often differ in suites of correlated behaviours, comparable with how humans differ in per...
The aim of the research included in this dissertation is to contribute to our understanding of how c...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Traditionally considered one of the most plastic traits an individual could exhibit, there is now mo...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
The ubiquity of consistent inter-individual differences in behavior ("animal personalities") [1, 2] ...
Animal personalities are ubiquitous across the animal kingdom and have been shown both to influence ...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Animal social networks can be extremely complex and are characterized by highly non-random interacti...
Central to this thesis is the investigation of how several factors (e.g. morphology, ecology, and so...
Central to this thesis is the investigation of how several factors (e.g. morphology, ecology, and so...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
1. Animals often differ in suites of correlated behaviours, comparable with how humans differ in per...
The aim of the research included in this dissertation is to contribute to our understanding of how c...
Establishing how collective behaviour emerges is central to our understanding of animal societies. P...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Traditionally considered one of the most plastic traits an individual could exhibit, there is now mo...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
The ubiquity of consistent inter-individual differences in behavior ("animal personalities") [1, 2] ...
Animal personalities are ubiquitous across the animal kingdom and have been shown both to influence ...
Social animals must time and coordinate their behaviour to ensure the benefits of grouping, resultin...
Animal social networks can be extremely complex and are characterized by highly non-random interacti...