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Behavioural and physiological plasticity in social hierarchies
by
Lee, W.
, Curley, J. P.
, Milewski, T. M.
, Champagne, F. A.
in
Aggression
/ Animals
/ Hierarchy, Social
/ Part II: Physiology and Neurobiology of Dominance
/ Reproduction - physiology
/ Review
/ Social Dominance
/ Territoriality
2022
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Behavioural and physiological plasticity in social hierarchies
by
Lee, W.
, Curley, J. P.
, Milewski, T. M.
, Champagne, F. A.
in
Aggression
/ Animals
/ Hierarchy, Social
/ Part II: Physiology and Neurobiology of Dominance
/ Reproduction - physiology
/ Review
/ Social Dominance
/ Territoriality
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Behavioural and physiological plasticity in social hierarchies
by
Lee, W.
, Curley, J. P.
, Milewski, T. M.
, Champagne, F. A.
in
Aggression
/ Animals
/ Hierarchy, Social
/ Part II: Physiology and Neurobiology of Dominance
/ Reproduction - physiology
/ Review
/ Social Dominance
/ Territoriality
2022
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Behavioural and physiological plasticity in social hierarchies
Journal Article
Behavioural and physiological plasticity in social hierarchies
2022
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Overview
Individuals occupying dominant and subordinate positions in social hierarchies exhibit divergent behaviours, physiology and neural functioning. Dominant animals express higher levels of dominance behaviours such as aggression, territorial defence and mate-guarding. Dominants also signal their status via auditory, visual or chemical cues. Moreover, dominant animals typically increase reproductive behaviours and show enhanced spatial and social cognition as well as elevated arousal. These biobehavioural changes increase energetic demands that are met via shifting both energy intake and metabolism and are supported by coordinated changes in physiological systems including the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal and hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axes as well as altered gene expression and sensitivity of neural circuits that regulate these behaviours. Conversely, subordinate animals inhibit dominance and often reproductive behaviours and exhibit physiological changes adapted to socially stressful contexts. Phenotypic changes in both dominant and subordinate individuals may be beneficial in the short-term but lead to long-term challenges to health. Further, rapid changes in social ranks occur as dominant animals socially ascend or descend and are associated with dynamic modulations in the brain and periphery. In this paper, we provide a broad overview of how behavioural and phenotypic changes associated with social dominance and subordination are expressed in neural and physiological plasticity.
This article is part of the theme issue 'The centennial of the pecking order: current state and future prospects for the study of dominance hierarchies'.
Publisher
Royal Society,The Royal Society
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