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Pierre-Olivier Montiglio

Researcher at Université du Québec à Montréal

Publications -  45
Citations -  2982

Pierre-Olivier Montiglio is an academic researcher from Université du Québec à Montréal. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Personality. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 42 publications receiving 2420 citations. Previous affiliations of Pierre-Olivier Montiglio include McGill University & University of California, Davis.

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Personality and the emergence of the pace-of-life syndrome concept at the population level

TL;DR: It is proposed that consistent behavioural differences among individuals, or personality, covary with life history and physiological differences at the within-population, interpopulation and interspecific levels.
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Animal personality and state–behaviour feedbacks: a review and guide for empiricists

TL;DR: The role of feedbacks in recent models of adaptive personalities, and guidelines for empirical testing of model assumptions and predictions are provided, to provide a roadmap for including state-behaviour Feedbacks in behavioural ecology research.
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From Individuals to Groups and Back: The Evolutionary Implications of Group Phenotypic Composition.

TL;DR: This work presents a unified framework to address how group phenotypic composition (GPC) can impact on processes ranging from individual fitness to population demography, and hopes to motivate more integrated empirical studies of the ecological and evolutionary implications of GPC.
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Social niche specialization under constraints: personality, social interactions and environmental heterogeneity

TL;DR: This paper shows how niche specialization can be quantified and highlight the link between personality differences and social niche specialization, and presents a conceptual model and methods to quantify the contribution of ecological factors and social mechanisms to the dynamics between personality and social roles.
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The pace-of-life syndrome revisited : the role of ecological conditions and natural history on the slow-fast continuum

TL;DR: The pace-of-life syndrome hypothesis is revisited, suggesting that behaviors involving a risk of death or injury should coevolve with higher metabolic rates, higher fecundity, faster growth, and heightened mortality rates.