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R notebook of code used for analyses from What you have, not who you know: food-enhanced social capital and changes in social behavioural relationships in a non-human primate

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DataCite Commons2023-12-21 更新2024-08-18 收录
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https://rs.figshare.com/articles/dataset/R_notebook_of_code_used_for_analyses_from_What_you_have_not_who_you_know_food-enhanced_social_capital_and_changes_in_social_behavioural_relationships_in_a_non-human_primate/24884136
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资源简介:
Social network position in non-human primates has far-reaching fitness consequences. Critically, social networks are both heterogeneous and dynamic, meaning an individual's current network position is likely to change due to both intrinsic and extrinsic factors. However, our understanding of the drivers of changes in social network position is largely confined to opportunistic studies. Experimental research on the consequences of <i>in situ,</i> controlled network perturbations is limited. Here we conducted a food-based experiment in rhesus macaques to assess whether allowing an individual the ability to provide high-quality food to her group changed her social behavioural relationships. We considered both her social network position across five behavioural networks, as well as her dominance and kin interactions. We found that gaining control over a preferential food resource had far-reaching social consequences. There was an increase in both submission and aggression centrality and changes in the socio-demographic characteristics of her agonistic interaction partners. Further, we found that her grooming balance shifted in her favour as she received more grooming than she gave. Together, these results provide a novel, preliminary insight into how <i>in situ</i>, experimental manipulations can modify social network position and point to broader network-level shifts in both social capital and social power.
提供机构:
The Royal Society
创建时间:
2023-12-21
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