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An Integrative Interdisciplinary Perspective on Social Dominance Hierarchies.

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TLDR
Findings from social neuroscience, evolutionary biology, and developmental psychology are integrated to highlight how social hierarchies are learned and represented in primates.
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This article is published in Trends in Cognitive Sciences.The article was published on 2017-11-01. It has received 71 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Social neuroscience & Social competence.

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Neural Mechanisms of Social Cognition in Primates.

TL;DR: Activity in a network of areas spanning the superior temporal sulcus, dorsomedial frontal cortex, and anterior cingulate cortex is concerned with how nonhuman primates negotiate the social worlds in which they live.
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Using the tube test to measure social hierarchy in mice

TL;DR: A step-by-step procedure to use the tube test to measure dominance within a cage of four male C57/BL6 mice as an example application and shows how the social hierarchy of a group of mice can be measured.
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Advances in understanding neural mechanisms of social dominance.

TL;DR: This review summarizes the latest advances in assay development for measuring dominance hierarchy in laboratory mice and reviews the current understandings on how activity and plasticity of specific neural circuits shape the dominance trait and mediate the 'winner effect'.
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The social neuroscience of race-based and status-based prejudice.

TL;DR: It is suggested that apparent differences in the brain regions supporting race-based and status-based evaluations may tap into distinct components of a common evaluative network.
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The establishment and maintenance of dominance hierarchies

TL;DR: The behaviours used to establish and maintain dominance hierarchies across different taxa and types of societies are described, including behaviours that stabilize ranks (punishment, threats, behavioural asymmetry) and signals that provide information about dominance rank (individual identity signals, signals of dominance).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Testosterone and dominance in men.

TL;DR: An unusual data set on Air Force veterans enables this work to compare the basal and reciprocal models as explanations for the relationship between T and divorce, and discusses sociological implications of these models.
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Punishment allows the evolution of cooperation (or anything else) in sizable groups

TL;DR: This article showed that cooperation enforced by retribution can lead to the evolution of cooperation in two qualitatively different ways: (1) if benefits of cooperation to an individual are greater than the costs to a single individual of coercing the other n − 1 individuals to cooperate, then strategies which cooperate and punish non-cooperators, strategies that cooperate only if punished, and, sometimes, strategies which cooperation but do not punish will coexist in the long run.
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Socioeconomic inequalities and mental health problems in children and adolescents: A systematic review

TL;DR: The included studies indicated that the theoretical approaches of social causation and classical selection are not mutually exclusive across generations and specificmental health problems; these processes create a cycle of deprivation and mental health problems.
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Getting to know you : Reputation and trust in a two-person economic exchange

TL;DR: Using a multiround version of an economic exchange (trust game), it is reported that reciprocity expressed by one player strongly predicts future trust expressed by their partner—a behavioral finding mirrored by neural responses in the dorsal striatum that extends previous model-based functional magnetic resonance imaging studies into the social domain.
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City living and urban upbringing affect neural social stress processing in humans.

TL;DR: It is shown that urban upbringing and city living have dissociable impacts on social evaluative stress processing in humans, and distinct neural mechanisms for an established environmental risk factor are identified.
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