Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T01:59:45.472Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Dominance: Strategy is the name of the game

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2010

Leonard A. Rosenblum
Affiliation:
Primate Behavior Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, SUNY, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11203
Gary G. Schwartz
Affiliation:
Primate Behavior Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, SUNY, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11203

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Continuing Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altmann, S. A. (1981) Dominance relationships. The Cheshire cat's grin? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:430–31. [JJMcK]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldwin, J. D. & Baldwin, J. l. (1979) The phylogenetic and ontogenetic variables that shape behavior and social organization. In: Primate ecology and human origins: Ecological influences on social organization, ed. Bernstein, I. S. & Smith, E. O., pp. 89116. Garland STPM Press. [JJMcK]Google Scholar
Barnett, S. A. (1981) Modern ethology The science of animal behavior. Oxford University Press. [SAB]Google Scholar
Bernstein, I. S. (1970) Primate status hierarchies. In: Primate behavior-Developments infield and laboratory research, ed. Rosenblum, L. A., pp. 71109. Academic Press. [SAB]Google Scholar
Bernstein, I. S. (1981a) Dominance relationships and ranks: Explanations, correlations, and empirical challenges. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:449–53. [HU]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, I. S. (1981) Dominance: The baby and the bathwater. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:419–29. [SAB, JMRD, JJMcK, LAR, HU]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, I. S. & Gordon, T. P. (1980) The social component of dominance relationships in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatto). Animal Behaviour 28.1033–39. [LAR]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolles, R. C. (1972) Reinforcement, expectancy, and learning, Psychological Review 79:394409. [KU]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brain, P. F. (1981) The concept of dominance also has problems in studies on rodents. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:434–35. [HU]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Candland, D. K. & Hoer, J. B. (1981) The logical status of dominance. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:436–37. [JJMcK]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chalmers, N. R. (1981) Dominance as part of a relationship. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:437–38. [JJMcK]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culbertson, E. (1943) Total peace. Doubleday. [LAR]Google Scholar
Delgado, J.M.R. (1963a) Cerebral heterostimulation in a monkey colony. Science 141.161–63. [JMRD]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delgado, J.M.R. (1963b) Effect of brain stimulation on task-free situations. In: The physiological basis of mental activity, ed. Peon, R. Hernandez. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, Supplement 24.260–80. [JMRD]Google Scholar
Delgado, J.M.R. (1979) Neurophysiological mechanisms of aggressive behavior. In: Aggression and behavior cliange, ed. Feshbach, S. & Fraczek, A., pp. 5465. Praeger Publishers. [JMRD]Google Scholar
Delgado, J.M.R. & Mir, D. (1969) Fragmental organization of emotional behavior in the monkey. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 159.731–51. [JMRD]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dolhinow, P., McKenna, J. J. & Vender, Haar Laws J. (1979) Rank and reproduction among female langur monkeys: Aging and improvement ( They're not just getting older, they're getting better). Aggressive Behavior 5:1930. [JJMcK]3.0.CO;2-7>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbar, R.I.M. (1979) Population demography, social organization and mating strategies. In. Primate ecology and human origins: Ecological influences on social organization, ed. Bernstein, I. S. & Smith, E. O., pp. 6589. Garland STPM Press. [JJMcK]Google Scholar
Eberhart, J. A., Keverne, E. B. & Meller, R. E. (1980) Social influences on plasma testosterone levels in male talapoin monkeys. Hormones and Behavior 14:247–66. [LAR]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fisher, R. A. (1958) The genetical theory of natural selection. Dover. [LAR]Google Scholar
Goodall, J., Bandora, A., Bergmann, E., Busse, C., Matama, H., Mpongo, E., Pierce, A. & Riss, D. (1979) Intercommunity interactions in the chimpanzee population of the Gombe National Park. In: The great apes, ed. Hamburg, D. A. & McCown, E. R., pp. 1353. Benjamin/Cummings. [LAR]Google Scholar
Hinde, R. A. & Datta, S. (1981) Dominance: An intervening variable. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4.442. [JJMcK, HU]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irons, W. (1980) Is Yomut social behavior adaptive? In: Sodobiology: Beyond nature I nurture?, ed. Barlow, G. W. & Silverberg, J., pp. 417–63. Westview Press. [LAR]Google Scholar
Kaplan, J. R. (1981) A reexamination of dominance rank and hierarchy in primates. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:442–43 [JJMcK]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kummer, H. (1968) Social organization of hamadryas baboons University of Chicago Press [LAR];Google Scholar
Lancaster, J. (1979) Sex and gender in evolutionary perspective. In: Human sexuality: A comparative and developmental perspective, ed. Kachadourian, H., pp. 4390. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. [JJMcK];Google Scholar
Levine, S., Weinberg, J. & Ursin, H. (1978) Definition of the coping process and statement of the problem. In: Psychobiology of stress A study of coping men, ed. Ursin, H., Baade, E. & Levine, S. Academic Press. [HU];Google Scholar
McKenna, J. J. (1975) The social roles and behavior of seventeen captive Indian langur monkeys (Presbytis entellus) Unpublished dissertation, University of Oregon. [JJMcK];Google Scholar
McKenna, J. J. (1979) The evolution of allomothering behavior among Colobine monkeys. Function and opportunism in evolution. American Anthropologist 8:818–40. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKenna, J. J. (1981) Primate infant-caregiving behavior: Origins, consequences and variability with emphasis upon the common Indian langur. In: Parental care in mammals, ed. Gubernick, D. & Klopfer, P., pp. 389416. Plenum Press. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayr, E. (1974) Teleological and teleonomic: A new analysis. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 14:91117. [LAR];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myhre, G. (1980) Social status, external signals and colonic temperature in the captive Willow Grouse Lagopus lagopus lagopus. Ornis Scandinavia 11:7780. [HU];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myhre, G., Ursin, H. & Hanssen, I. (1981) Corticosterone and body temperature during acquisition of social hierarchy in the captive willow ptarmigan (Lagopus L. Lagopus). Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie, in press. [HU];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petraitis, P. S. (1981) Dominance rankings and problems of intransitive relationships. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:445–46. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plimpton, E. H., Swartz, K. B. & Rosenblum, L. A. (1981) Responses of juvenile bonnet macaques to social stimuli presented through color videotapes. Developmental Psychobiology 14:109–15. [LAR];CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Plotnik, R., Mir, D. & Delgado, J.M.R. (1971) Aggression, noxiousness and brain stimulation in unrestrained rhesus monkeys. In: Physiology of aggression and defeat, ed. Eleftheriou, B. F. & Scott, J. P., pp. 143221. Plenum Press. [JMRD]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowell, T. E. (1974) The concept of social dominance. Behavioral Biology 11.131–54. [SAB];CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rowell, T. E. (1979) How would WE know if social organization were NOT adaptive? In: Primate ecology and human origins: Ecological influences on social organization, ed. Bernstein, I. S. & Smith, E. O., 123. Garland STPM Press. [JJMcK];Google Scholar
Sackett, G. P (1966) Monkeys reared in isolation with pictures as visual input: Evidence for an innate releasing mechanism. Science 154.1468–73. [LAR];CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sackett, G. P., Holm, R. A., Ruppenthal, G. C. & Farhrenbruch, C. E. (1976) The effects of total social isolation rearing on behavior of rhesus and pigtail macaques. In: Advances in behavioral biology, vol. 17, Environments as therapy for brain dysfunction, ed. Walsh, R. N. & Greenough, W. T.. Plenum Press. [LAR];Google Scholar
Sade, D. S. (1967) Determinants of dominance in a group of free-ranging rhesus monkeys. In: Social communication among primates, ed. Altmann, S. A., pp. 99114. University of Chicago Press. [LAR];Google Scholar
Schjelderup-Ebbe, T. (1922) Beiträge zur Sozialpsychologie des Haushuhns. Zeitschrift für Psychologie 88:225–52. [ISB];Google Scholar
Schjelderup-Ebbe, T. (1935) Social behavior of birds. In: A handbook of social psychology, ed. Murchison, C. A., pp. 947–72. Clark University Press. [ISB];Google Scholar
Seyfarth, R. M. (1981) Do monkeys rank each other? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:447–48. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slobodkin, L. B. (1964) The strategy of evolution. American Scientist 52:342–57. [LAR];Google ScholarPubMed
Slobodkin, L. B. & Rapaport, A. (1974) An optimal strategy of evolution. Quarterly Review of Biology 49:181200. [LAR];CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smuts, B. (1981) Dominance: An alternative view. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4.448–49. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Struhsaker, T. T. (1967) Social structure among vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops). Behaviour 29:83121. [SAB];CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Symons, D. (1978) The question of function: Dominance and play. In: Social play in primates, ed. Smith, E. O., pp. 193230. Academic Press. [JJMcK];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vessey, S. H. (1981) Dominance as control. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4:449. [HU];CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warburton, F. E. (1967) A model of natural selection based on a theory of guessing games. Journal of Theoretical Biology 16:7896. [LAR];CrossRefGoogle Scholar