Winner and loser effects, in which the outcome of an aggressive encounter influences the tendency to escalate future conflicts, have been documented in many taxa, but we have limited understanding of why they have evolved. One possibility is that individuals use previous victories and defeats to assess their fighting ability relative to others. We explored this idea by modelling a population of strong and weak individuals that do not know their own strength, but keep track of how many fights they have won. Under these conditions, adaptive behaviour generates clear winner and loser effects: individuals who win fights should escalate subsequent conflicts, whereas those who lose should retreat from aggressive opponents. But these effects depen...
Many animals spend large parts of their lives in groups. Within such groups, they need to find effic...
Prior modeling work has found that pure winner and loser effects (i.e., changing the estimation of y...
An individual’s contest history can have a significant effect on their probability of winning a futu...
Winner and loser effects, in which the outcome of an aggressive encounter influences the tendency to...
Social experience influences the outcome of conflicts such that winners are more likely to win again...
Individuals with a previous experience of dominance are likely to be dominants in further encounters...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
Many factors can affect the probability for an individual to obtain a high social rank, including si...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
[[abstract]]Considerable evidence indicates that experience in prior contests influences how individ...
Contest behaviour, and in particular the propensity to attack an unfamiliar conspecific, is influenc...
In the literature on dominance hierarchies, "winner " and "loser " effects usual...
Many animals spend large parts of their lives in groups. Within such groups, they need to find effic...
Although our understanding of how animal personality affects fitness is incomplete, one general hypo...
Many animals spend large parts of their lives in groups. Within such groups, they need to find effic...
Prior modeling work has found that pure winner and loser effects (i.e., changing the estimation of y...
An individual’s contest history can have a significant effect on their probability of winning a futu...
Winner and loser effects, in which the outcome of an aggressive encounter influences the tendency to...
Social experience influences the outcome of conflicts such that winners are more likely to win again...
Individuals with a previous experience of dominance are likely to be dominants in further encounters...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
Many factors can affect the probability for an individual to obtain a high social rank, including si...
A difference in dominance rank is an often-used cue to resolve conflicts between two animals without...
[[abstract]]Considerable evidence indicates that experience in prior contests influences how individ...
Contest behaviour, and in particular the propensity to attack an unfamiliar conspecific, is influenc...
In the literature on dominance hierarchies, "winner " and "loser " effects usual...
Many animals spend large parts of their lives in groups. Within such groups, they need to find effic...
Although our understanding of how animal personality affects fitness is incomplete, one general hypo...
Many animals spend large parts of their lives in groups. Within such groups, they need to find effic...
Prior modeling work has found that pure winner and loser effects (i.e., changing the estimation of y...
An individual’s contest history can have a significant effect on their probability of winning a futu...