about
Experience affects the outcome of agonistic contests without affecting the selective advantage of sizeAggression in Tephritidae Flies: Where, When, Why? Future Directions for Research in Integrated Pest ManagementSex-specific mechanism of social hierarchy in miceAssessment of fight outcome is needed to activate socially driven transcriptional changes in the zebrafish brain.Social Plasticity Relies on Different Neuroplasticity Mechanisms across the Brain Social Decision-Making Network in ZebrafishSelf-organizing dominance hierarchies in a wild primate populationThe network motif architecture of dominance hierarchiesA single social defeat reduces aggression in a highly aggressive strain of Drosophila.Behavioral characterization of escalated aggression induced by GABA(B) receptor activation in the dorsal raphe nucleus.Generalized reciprocity in rats.Self assessment in insects: honeybee queens know their own strength.Examination of prior contest experience and the retention of winner and loser effects.From molecule to market: steroid hormones and financial risk-taking.Ejaculatory strategies associated with experience of losing.Winning fights induces hyperaggression via the action of the biogenic amine octopamine in crickets.Social interactions through the eyes of macaques and humansLearning and memory during aggression in Drosophila: handling affects aggression and the formation of a "loser" effect.The ghost of social environments past: dominance relationships include current interactions and experience carried over from previous groups.Prior contest experience exerts a long-term influence on subsequent winner and loser effectsThe decision to fight or flee - insights into underlying mechanism in crickets.Correlated pay-offs are key to cooperationWinner and loser effects are modulated by hormonal states.Stress amplifies memory for social hierarchy.Short and long-lasting behavioral consequences of agonistic encounters between male Drosophila melanogaster.Effects of age and experience on contest behavior in the burying beetle, Nicrophorus vespilloides.Unfolding personalities: the importance of studying ontogeny.Social plasticity in fish: integrating mechanisms and function.The evolution of respect for property.Individual recognition in crayfish (Cherax dispar): the roles of strength and experience in deciding aggressive encountersStrategy changes in subsequent fights as consequences of winning and losing in fruit fly fights.Testosterone and reproductive effort in male primates.Chronic social defeat induces long-term behavioral depression of aggressive motivation in an invertebrate model systemAggression and related behavioral traits: the impact of winning and losing and the role of hormones.Social Aggression, Experience, and Brain Gene Expression in a Subsocial Bee.Contest experience enhances aggressive behaviour in a fly: when losers learn to win.Social conflict resolution regulated by two dorsal habenular subregions in zebrafish.BEHAVIOR. A brain conditioned for social defeat.Early development influences ontogeny of personality types in young laboratory rats.The day after: effects of vocal interactions on territory defence in nightingales.Repetitive aggressive encounters generate a long-lasting internal state in Drosophila melanogaster males.
P2860
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P2860
description
2005 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2005年の論文
@ja
2005年学术文章
@wuu
2005年学术文章
@zh-cn
2005年学术文章
@zh-hans
2005年学术文章
@zh-my
2005年学术文章
@zh-sg
2005年學術文章
@yue
2005年學術文章
@zh
2005年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@ast
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@en
type
label
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@ast
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@en
prefLabel
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@ast
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@en
P1476
What sets the odds of winning and losing?
@en
P2093
Claudia Rutte
Martin W G Brinkhof
P356
10.1016/J.TREE.2005.10.014
P577
2005-11-03T00:00:00Z