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Dominance Orders in Animal Societies: The Self-organization Hypothesis Revisited

โœ Scribed by Eric Bonabeau; Guy Theraulaz; Jean-Louis Deneubourg


Book ID
102566512
Publisher
Springer
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
296 KB
Volume
61
Category
Article
ISSN
1522-9602

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โœฆ Synopsis


In previous papers we suggested, following Hogeweg and Hesper (1983, 1985), that the formation of dominance orders in animal societies could result from a self-organizing process involving a double reinforcement mechanism: winners reinforce their probability of winning and losers reinforce their probability of losing. This assumption, and subsequent models relying on it, were based on empirical data on primitively eusocial wasps (Polistes dominulus). By reanalysing some of the experimental data that was previously thought to be irrelevant, we show that it is impossible to distinguish this assumption from a competing assumption based on preexisting differences among individuals. We propose experiments to help discriminate between the two assumptions and their corresponding models-the self-organization model and the correlational model. We urge other researchers to be cautious when interpreting their dominance data with the 'self-organization mindset'; in particular, 'winner and loser effects', which are often considered to give support to the self-organization assumption, are equally consistent with the correlational assumption.


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