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Journal Article

Citation

Zumpe D, Michael RP. Am. J. Primatol. 1986; 10(4): 291-300.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Emory University School of Medicine and The Georgia Mental Health Institute, Atlanta, Georgia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/ajp.1350100402

PMID

31979473

Abstract

A simple measure of relative dominance status (cardinal rank) is described which we have termed the dominance index. Like more familiar techniques for assessing rank order, it is based on the direction of aggressive and submissive behaviors between all possible paired combinations of animals in a social group. Using data from five groups of female rhesus monkeys, it reliably produced the same ordinal ranks as fight interaction matrices. There was also good agreement with the cardinal ranks produced by two additional measures of dominance and with those produced by observer ratings. The dominance index can be calculated when fights have not actually occurred and is largely independent of the frequency of agonistic interactions. It has, therefore, wide application and can estimate dominance during brief sampling periods (one hour) and also in stable groups when agonistic interactions are low. Its application is described in experiments in which the male in a group of females was changed and the hormonal status of the females was altered. Estrogen increased female dominance status relative to other females.

Copyright © 1986 Wiley‐Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company.


Language: en

Keywords

Macaca mulatta; agonistic behavior; hormones; primates; rank; rhesus macaques; social groups

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