A likely ranking interpolation for resolving dominance orders in systems with unknown relationships

Behaviour ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 143 (7) ◽  
pp. 909-930 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Wittemyer ◽  
W.M. Getz

AbstractIn many animal systems agonistic interactions may be rare or not overt, particularly where such interactions are costly or of high risk as is common for large mammals. We present a technique developed specifically for resolving an optimized dominance order of individuals in systems with transitive (i.e. linear) dominance relationships, but where not all relationships are known. Our method augments the widely used I&SI method (de Vries, 1998) with an interpolation function for resolving the relative ranks of individuals with unknown relationships. Our method offers several advantages over other dominance methods by enabling the incorporation of any proportion of unknown relationships, resolving a unique solution to any dominance matrix, and calculating cardinal dominance strengths for each individual. As such, this method enables novel insight into difficult to study behavioural systems.

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 459-465
Author(s):  
Siddharth Pahwa ◽  
Elizabeth H. Stephens ◽  
Joseph A. Dearani

With the increasing number of congenital heart disease patients living into adulthood and requiring reoperations, learning a safe and efficient reoperative sternotomy is essential. This article provides insight into the successful reoperative sternotomy, including preoperative evaluation, assessing risk for cardiac injury and preparations to take depending on the level of risk, safeguards taken before and during the sternotomy, and pearls and pitfalls in managing untoward events.


Behaviour ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 37 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 291-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis G. Raveling

AbstractThe dominance relationships and associated agonistic postures of Canada geese were studied during the winters 1963-64 and 1964-65 by observation of the behavior of radio-and color-marked families and individuals living in a large, wild flock in southern Illinois. Part I I. Behavior was not significantly altered by color-marking and attachment of trausmitters. 2. Hostile encounters occurred during almost all activities. They varied widely in frequency and intensity and were especially associated with feeding. 3. Success in hostile encounters was directly related to family size, i.e., large family> smaller family > pair > single. 4. Unified action by all members of a family occurred in 8.5 percent of victories and T5 percent of defeats. 5. All members of a family shared equal dominance status but the success of a family in the rank order was most dependent upon the gander. 6. Only once in 26 fights between unmarked family ganders did the gander of the largest family lose. 7. Dominance position of family individuals decreased immediately upon separation and increased upon reunification of family members. 8. Large families were engaged in significantly more conflicts per unit time than were singles, pairs, and small families. 9. Exceptions to the usual dominance hierarchy occurred after pairs were newly formed. The gander of a newly formed pair could dominate family ganders. 10. Intrafamily aggression was rare and of low intensity. 11. Fights rarely occurred; threats and chases were common. 12. In some instances, rank orders based upon individual recognition could exist. However, stable rank orders in most large flocks appear to be based on recognition of different postures and levels of intensity of threat. 13. The dominance order of geese yields benefit in terms of food and space acquisition and freedom from defeat in aggressive encounters for the pairs and their young in direct relation to those most successful at raising a brood. Part II 1. Postures associated with attack or fleeing or simultaneous tendencies to do both are described. These include actual fleeing or attack, Submissive attitude, Erect, Head-pumping, Rolling, Bent-neck, and Forward postures. 2. The Submissive attitude is exhibited mostly by single geese and probably results from the conflicting tendency to approach (but not attack) and flee from other geese at the same time. This posture functions to identify single geese, allow approach, habituation, and ultimately pair formation, and inhibits violent attack. 3. The Erect posture may take either the form of intention movements of escape or attack and represents an ambivalent motivation between these two tendencies. 4. Head-pumping contains alternating intention movements of attacking and fleeing and represents almost a perfect balance between these two tendencies but is of higher intensity and ritualization than the Erect position. 5. Rolling is a complex portion of the Triumph Ceremony but also serves as the most intense threat of Canada geese and is highly ritualized. The spatial relationships of a gander to his mate and family appear most important in motivating Rolling. Intrusion of another high ranking gander or family on those boundaries may result in violent attack. 6. Erect, Head-pumping, and Rolling serve as three different intensity threats which are recognized by other geese and serve to maintain and establish the rank order of geese without undue fighting. 7. Bent-neck and Forward postures may occasionally represent conflicting attack and flee tendencies but often appear to represent a conflict of attack and remain doing another activity such as feeding or preening. These postures serve to maintain and reinforce a rank order but are probably not very important in initial establishment of rank.


2009 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick A. Stewart ◽  
Frank K. Salter ◽  
Marc Mehu

Research investigating the influence and character of nonverbal leader displays has been carried out in a systematic fashion since the early 1980s, yielding growing insight into how viewers respond to the televised facial display behavior of politicians. This article reviews the major streams of research in this area by considering the key ethological frameworks for understanding dominance relationships between leaders and followers and the role nonverbal communication plays in politics and social organization. The analysis focuses on key categories of facial display behavior by examining an extended selection of published experimental studies considering the influence of nonverbal leader behavior on observers, the nature of stimuli shown to research participants, range of measures employed, and make-up of participant pools. We conclude with suggestions for future research.


Hematology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
pp. 673-681
Author(s):  
Alissa Visram ◽  
Joselle Cook ◽  
Rahma Warsame

Abstract The adage for smoldering myeloma (SMM) has been to observe without treatment, until criteria for active multiple myeloma were satisfied. Definitions and risk stratification models have become more sophisticated, with prognostication tailored to include high-risk cytogenetics as per the most recent International Myeloma Working Group 2020 risk model. Moreover, progress in defining genomic evolution and changes in the bone marrow microenvironment through the monoclonal continuum have given insight into the complexities underlying the different patterns of progression observed in SMM. Given recent data showing improved progression-free survival with early intervention in high-risk SMM, the current dilemma is focused on how these patients should be treated. This case-based article maps the significant advancements made in the diagnosis and risk stratification of SMM. Data from landmark clinical trials will also be discussed, and ongoing trials are summarized. Ultimately, we outline our approach to SMM and hope to impart to the reader a sound concept of the current clinical management of SMM.


2002 ◽  
Vol 2002 ◽  
pp. 72-72
Author(s):  
H.W. Erhard ◽  
A.M. Sibbald ◽  
E. Fàbrega-Romans

Female sheep do not frequently show overt dominance displays while grazing on pasture. This has led to the conclusion that, for female sheep, dominance at pasture is of little importance. While sheep show few agonistic interactions, they do make clear and consistent choices of who they graze close to. This experiment was designed to answer the question whether these choices reflect the underlying dominance relationships between individuals, potentially being the reason for the low level of agonistic interactions on pasture.


Mathematics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 809
Author(s):  
Aissa Boukarou ◽  
Kaddour Guerbati ◽  
Khaled Zennir ◽  
Sultan Alodhaibi ◽  
Salem Alkhalaf

Studies of modified Korteweg-de Vries-type equations are of considerable mathematical interest due to the importance of their applications in various branches of mechanics and physics. In this article, using trilinear estimate in Bourgain spaces, we show the local well-posedness of the initial value problem associated with a coupled system consisting of modified Korteweg-de Vries equations for given data. Furthermore, we prove that the unique solution belongs to Gevrey space G σ × G σ in x and G 3 σ × G 3 σ in t. This article is a continuation of recent studies reflected.


Author(s):  
Lisa Hellman

Swedish East India Company and private trader Michael Grubb lived between groups and norms at a time of historical change. He arrived in Canton before the golden age of the Company as a whole (which was the end of the 1770s), but experienced the time when the largest private fortunes were made. He also arrived before the Swedish company had completely established the strict division between company and private trade, but when most trade restrictions were already in place. He was an opium trader before opium dominated the trade, and he also worked as a go-between for different trade groups; this was a role made possible by the considerable freedom that Swedish supercargoes had to conduct private trade, despite tension between private and company interests. Men like Grubb and his Swedish compatriot Jean Abraham Grill also demonstrate the importance of social relations in multinational involvement, and how those relations could both shape the Canton Trade and be shaped by it. In addition, Grubb’s relationship with Macao resident Isabel Jackson provides insight into traders’ relationships with local women. Finally, Grubb’s and Grill’s lives also illustrate the widely varying fates of China traders after their return to their homeland. While Grill invested wisely after returning to Sweden, Grubb squandered his fortune in high-risk business ventures and spent his last years in poverty.


Behaviour ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 152 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 1063-1082 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Chibucos ◽  
S.J. Wofford ◽  
P.A. Moore

The outcome of agonistic interactions is critical to the acquisition of vital resources. These behaviours can be influenced by several intrinsic and extrinsic factors, and multi-faceted studies are necessary for ecologically relevant studies. The aim of this study was to combine the effects of past social experience, resource ownership, and the distribution of shelter resources to examine the combination of these effects on various measures of agonism in crayfish (Orconectes rusticus). Crayfish were assigned to one of three social conditioning treatments (naïve, subordinate, dominant) and then introduced to an arena where they were assigned to a resident or intruder treatment. An intruder shelter was then positioned 20, 60 or 120 cm from the resident shelter. We found that resource distribution (shelter distance) played a larger role in influencing agonistic behaviour than did past social experience or current social status.


2001 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Delphine Gosset ◽  
Isabelle Fornasieri ◽  
Jean-Jacques Roeder

We investigated the vocal repertoire of a Malagasy primate: the black lemur (Eulemur macaco macaco). The first study allowed the characterization of 16 different vocal signals on the basis of acoustic parameters. Black lemurs emit sparse harmonic sounds, dense harmonic sounds, spectrally structured noise (Beeman, 1998) and a wide variety of grunts. The second study focused on the behavioral context of emission of these signals and used the pre- and post-event histogram method (Douglass and Sudd, 1980; Preuschoft, 1995a). It provides statistical demonstration of the association between a signal and other behaviors of the emitter, thus giving insight into the latter’s motivations. Four signals are linked to affiliative and agonistic interactions. Three signals express a state of alarm, and two appear related to discomfort. Most grunts are linked to contact and signal precisely the emitter’s level of vigilance. Other interdisciplinary communication studies could benefit from methodology and software used here.


2015 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 938-944 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel S. Shin ◽  
Geoffrey Murdoch ◽  
Ronald L. Hamilton ◽  
Amir H. Faraji ◽  
Hideyuki Kano ◽  
...  

OBJECT Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is a therapeutic option for repeatedly hemorrhagic cavernous malformations (CMs) located in areas deemed to be high risk for resection. During the latency period of 2 or more years after SRS, recurrent hemorrhage remains a persistent risk until the obliterative process has finished. The pathological response to SRS has been studied in relatively few patients. The authors of the present study aimed to gain insight into the effect of SRS on CM and to propose possible mechanisms leading to recurrent hemorrhages following SRS. METHODS During a 13-year interval between 2001 and 2013, bleeding recurred in 9 patients with CMs that had been treated using Gamma Knife surgery at the authors' institution. Microsurgical removal was subsequently performed in 5 of these patients, who had recurrent hemorrhages between 4 months and 7 years after SRS. Specimens from 4 patients were available for analysis and used for this report. RESULTS Histopathological analysis demonstrated that vascular sclerosis develops as early as 4 months after SRS. In the samples from 2 to 7 years after SRS, sclerotic vessels were prominent, but there were also vessels with incomplete sclerosis as well as some foci of neovascularization. CONCLUSIONS Recurrent bleeding after SRS for CM could be related to incomplete sclerosis of the vessels, but neovascularization may also play a role.


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