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Formidable females redux:male social integration into female networks and the value of dynamic multilayer networks
作者姓名:Tyler R.BONNELL  ChloéVILETTE  Christopher YOUNG  Stephanus Peter HENZI  ouise BARRETT
作者单位:Department of Psychology;Applied Behavioural Ecology and Ecosystems Research Unit;Endocrine Research Laboratory
基金项目:This work was funded by NRH(South Africa)and UNISA awards(S.P.H.),NSERC(Canada)Discovery grants(L.B.,S.P.H.);the NSERC Canada Research Chair program(L.B.);C.Y.is the recipient of a University of Pretoria Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship;T.B.has been funded by an FQNRT Post-Doctoral Fellowship;T.B.and C.V.are currently funded by NSERC Canada Research Chair and Discovery Grants held by L.B.
摘    要:The development of multilayer network techniques is a boon for researchers who wish to understand how different interaction layers might influence each other,and how these in turn might influence group dynamics.Here,we investigate how integration between male and female grooming and aggression interaction networks influences male power trajectories in vervet monkeys Chlorocebus pygerythrus.Our previous analyses of this phenomenon used a monolayer approach,and our aim here is to extend these analyses using a dynamic multilayer approach.To do so,we constructed a temporal series of male and female interaction layers.We then used a multivariate multilevel autoregression model to compare cross-lagged associations between a male's centrality in the female grooming layer and changes in male Elo ratings.Our results confirmed our original findings:changes in male centrality within the female grooming network were weakly but positively tied to changes in their Elo ratings.However,the multilayer network approach offered additional insights into this social process,identifying how changes in a male's centrality cascade through the other network layers.This dynamic view indicates that the changes in Elo ratings are likely to be short-lived,but that male centrality within the female network had a much stronger impact throughout the multilayer network as a whole,especially on reducing intermale aggression(i.e.,aggression directed by males toward other males).We suggest that multilayer social network approaches can take advantage of increased amounts of social data that are more commonly collected these days,using a variety of methods.Such data are inherently multilevel and multilayered,and thus offer the ability to quantify more precisely the dynamics of animal social behaviors.

关 键 词:multilayer  networks  multilevel  multivariate  autoregressive  model  primate  social  dynamics  social  networks  SOCIALITY  time-aggregated  networks  vervet  monkeys
收稿时间:2020 Mar 4

Formidable females redux: male social integration into female networks and the value of dynamic multilayer networks
Tyler R Bonnell,Chlo Vilette,Christopher Young,Stephanus Peter Henzi,Louise Barrett.Formidable females redux:male social integration into female networks and the value of dynamic multilayer networks[J].Current Zoology,2021,67(1):49-57.
Authors:Tyler R Bonnell  Chlo Vilette  Christopher Young  Stephanus Peter Henzi  Louise Barrett
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, T1K 3M4, Canada;2. Applied Behavioural Ecology and Ecosystems Research Unit, University of South Africa, Florida, Gauteng, South Africa;3. Endocrine Research Laboratory, Mammal Research Institute, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Science, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa
Abstract:The development of multilayer network techniques is a boon for researchers who wish to understand how different interaction layers might influence each other, and how these in turn might influence group dynamics. Here, we investigate how integration between male and female grooming and aggression interaction networks influences male power trajectories in vervet monkeys Chlorocebus pygerythrus. Our previous analyses of this phenomenon used a monolayer approach, and our aim here is to extend these analyses using a dynamic multilayer approach. To do so, we constructed a temporal series of male and female interaction layers. We then used a multivariate multilevel autoregression model to compare cross-lagged associations between a male’s centrality in the female grooming layer and changes in male Elo ratings. Our results confirmed our original findings: changes in male centrality within the female grooming network were weakly but positively tied to changes in their Elo ratings. However, the multilayer network approach offered additional insights into this social process, identifying how changes in a male’s centrality cascade through the other network layers. This dynamic view indicates that the changes in Elo ratings are likely to be short-lived, but that male centrality within the female network had a much stronger impact throughout the multilayer network as a whole, especially on reducing intermale aggression (i.e., aggression directed by males toward other males). We suggest that multilayer social network approaches can take advantage of increased amounts of social data that are more commonly collected these days, using a variety of methods. Such data are inherently multilevel and multilayered, and thus offer the ability to quantify more precisely the dynamics of animal social behaviors.
Keywords:multilayer networks  multilevel multivariate autoregressive model  primate social dynamics  social networks  sociality  time-aggregated networks  vervet monkeys
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