Dear All,
Please see below - some of you might be interested.
Thanks Zsuzsa!
Best wishes,
Pawel
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From: Zsuzsa Lugosi <zsuzsa.lugosi(a)stir.ac.uk>
Sent: 17 November 2021 09:32
To: Pawel Fedurek <pawel.fedurek(a)stir.ac.uk>
Subject: Fwd: Next CJC (22 Nov): The dynamics of dominance between the sexes in primates
Hi Pawel,
I thought this Journal Club organized by St. andrews might be of interest to some in BERG,
would you mind forwarding it?
It is on Monday at 1pm.
Kind regards,
Zsuzsa
Get Outlook for
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________________________________
From: Manon Schweinfurth <ms397(a)st-andrews.ac.uk>
Sent: Monday, November 15, 2021 1:26:29 PM
Cc: Hemelrijk, C.K. <c.k.hemelrijk(a)rug.nl>
Subject: Next CJC (22 Nov): The dynamics of dominance between the sexes in primates
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Dear all,
It is my great pleasure to let you know that our Cognition Journal Club will be hosting
Prof. Charlotte K. Hemelrijk next Monday at 1pm via Teams.
Charlotte is full professor of the self-organisation of social systems at the University
Groningen in the Netherlands. Her main topics of study, at present, are the collective
escape in bird flocks and dominance relations between the sexes in all kinds of animals.
For studying the dynamics of intersexual dominance, she develops bottom-up computational
models and tests them in real animals, with a focus on primates and rodents.
In the upcoming CJC, Charlotte will be talking about the dynamics of dominance between the
sexes in primates, which nicely aligns and greatly extends our last CJC. Please find below
an abstract of what she will be talking about:
In social systems of animals their dominance of females relative to males matter to
females, for instance, when defending themselves against sexual harassment and when
competing for food. Females in group-living primates are usually smaller than males. Yet
despite their smaller body size, females are often seen to dominate a few males. In the
present study, we show that female dominance over males increases due to the
self-reinforcing effects of winning and losing fights under certain conditions. First, in
computational models, we show this happens when the aggression of both sexes is fiercer,
aggression by males is more intense than by females, the fraction of males in the group is
higher, and females need more food than males. Second, we confirm these model-based
hypotheses in empirical data of macaques, vervet monkeys, capuchin monkeys, lemurs and
humans.
Please feel free to forward this mail and come along.
You can join the meeting by clicking the link below or clicking “join” in our CJC Team on
the day.
Click here to join the
meeting<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/ap/t-59584e83/?ur…
Best wishes,
Manon
________________________________
Dr Manon Schweinfurth (she/her)
Lecturer, University of St Andrews
School of Psychology & Neuroscience
St Mary's Quad, St Andrews, KY16 9JP
Office: E48
Phone: +44 (0)1334 463460
Homepage<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%…
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