Results 281 to 290 of about 4,628,488 (329)
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Social Behavior: Social Neurosciences and Social Behavior: An Introduction
2016Social neuroscience seeks both to understand how the brain gives rise to cognitive processes required for social interaction and decision making, and to understand the neural mechanisms of and to help design treatments for dysfunctions of social cognition.
Adolphs, Ralph, Spezio, Michael
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2021
Forms of Social Behavior Mutual Benefit Altruism and Reciprocity Selfishness and Spite The Evolution of Cooperative Breeding Direct versus Indirect Benefits Costs of Breeding Cooperatively Individual Differences in Cooperative Behavior
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Forms of Social Behavior Mutual Benefit Altruism and Reciprocity Selfishness and Spite The Evolution of Cooperative Breeding Direct versus Indirect Benefits Costs of Breeding Cooperatively Individual Differences in Cooperative Behavior
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2022
This chapter addresses the social behavior of vultures. Vultures are considered social species in part because they often roost communally and feed in groups. One of two of the world's most common and widespread obligate avian scavengers, the Turkey Vulture, is relatively non-social, whereas the other, the Black Vulture, is highly social.
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This chapter addresses the social behavior of vultures. Vultures are considered social species in part because they often roost communally and feed in groups. One of two of the world's most common and widespread obligate avian scavengers, the Turkey Vulture, is relatively non-social, whereas the other, the Black Vulture, is highly social.
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Measuring Social Behavior: Social Dominance
Journal of Animal Science, 1986Social dominance develops more slowly when young animals are kept in intact peer groups where they need not compete for resources. Learned generalizations may cause smaller and weaker animals to accept subordinate status readily when confronted with strangers that would be formidable opponents.
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Behavioral social learning [PDF]
We revisit the economic models of social learning by assuming that individuals update their beliefs in a non-Bayesian way. Individuals either overweigh or underweigh (in Bayesian terms) their private information relative to the public information revealed by the decisions of others and each individual's updating rule is private information.
Christoph March, Anthony Ziegelmeyer
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