Social Exclusion: More Important to Human Females Than Males
Abstract
Theoretical models based on primate evidence suggest that social structure determines the costs and benefits of particular aggressive strategies. In humans, males more than females interact in groups of unrelated same-sex peers, and larger group size predicts success in inter-group contests. In marked contrast, human females form isolated one-on-one relationships with fewer instrumental benefits, so social exclusion constitutes a more useful...
Paper Details
Title
Social Exclusion: More Important to Human Females Than Males
Published Date
Feb 6, 2013
Journal
Volume
8
Issue
2
Pages
e55851 - e55851
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Notes
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