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Listen, follow me: Dynamic vocal signals of dominance predict emergent social rank in humans
2016
Journal of experimental psychology. General
Similar to the nonverbal signals shown by many nonhuman animals during aggressive conflicts, humans display a broad range of behavioral signals to advertise and augment their apparent size, strength, and fighting prowess when competing for social dominance. Favored by natural selection, these signals communicate the displayer's capacity and willingness to inflict harm, and increase responders' likelihood of detecting and establishing a rank asymmetry, and thus avoiding costly physical
doi:10.1037/xge0000166
pmid:27019023
fatcat:w7jjx6i35rhfhkds5jkmakwzxq