932,130 research outputs found
Effects of social disruption in elephants persist decades after culling.
BACKGROUND
Multi-level fission-fusion societies, characteristic of a number of large brained mammal species including some primates, cetaceans and elephants, are among the most complex and cognitively demanding animal social systems. Many free-ranging populations of these highly social mammals already face severe human disturbance, which is set to accelerate with projected anthropogenic environmental change. Despite this, our understanding of how such disruption affects core aspects of social functioning is still very limited.
RESULTS
We now use novel playback experiments to assess decision-making abilities integral to operating successfully within complex societies, and provide the first systematic evidence that fundamental social skills may be significantly impaired by anthropogenic disruption. African elephants (Loxodonta africana) that had experienced separation from family members and translocation during culling operations decades previously performed poorly on systematic tests of their social knowledge, failing to distinguish between callers on the basis of social familiarity. Moreover, elephants from the disrupted population showed no evidence of discriminating between callers when age-related cues simulated individuals on an increasing scale of social dominance, in sharp contrast to the undisturbed population where this core social ability was well developed.
CONCLUSIONS
Key decision-making abilities that are fundamental to living in complex societies could be significantly altered in the long-term through exposure to severely disruptive events (e.g. culling and translocation). There is an assumption that wildlife responds to increasing pressure from human societies only in terms of demography, however our study demonstrates that the effects may be considerably more pervasive. These findings highlight the potential long-term negative consequences of acute social disruption in cognitively advanced species that live in close-knit kin-based societies, and alter our perspective on the health and functioning of populations that have been subjected to anthropogenic disturbance
The Genome and Methylome of a Subsocial Small Carpenter Bee, Ceratina calcarata
Understanding the evolution of animal societies, considered to be a major transition in evolution, is a key topic in evolutionary biology. Recently, new gateways for understanding social evolution have opened up due to advances in genomics, allowing for unprecedented opportunities in studying social behavior on a molecular level. In particular, highly eusocial insect species (caste-containing societies with nonreproductives that care for siblings) have taken center stage in studies of the molecular evolution of sociality. Despite advances in genomic studies of both solitary and eusocial insects, we still lack genomic resources for early insect societies. To study the genetic basis of social traits requires comparison of genomes from a diversity of organisms ranging from solitary to complex social forms. Here we present the genome of a subsocial bee, Ceratina calcarata. This study begins to address the types of genomic changes associated with the earliest origins of simple sociality using the small carpenter bee. Genes associated with lipid transport and DNA recombination have undergone positive selection in C. calcarata relative to other bee lineages. Furthermore, we provide the first methylome of a noneusocial bee. Ceratina calcarata contains the complete enzymatic toolkit for DNA methylation. As in the honey bee and many other holometabolous insects, DNA methylation is targeted to exons. The addition of this genome allows for new lines of research into the genetic and epigenetic precursors to complex social behaviors
Reinforcing Students’ Research Abilities via Digital Repositories
Computer science graduates are requested to possess complex professional abilities including research skills. In this paper we justify the development of a departmental repository to assist all non-auditorium activities and summarize its benefits. We are convinced that this is the way students and teachers to form interim learning societies
Resonant X-ray emission spectroscopy reveals d–d ligand-field states involved in the self-assembly of a square-planar platinum complex
Resonant X-ray Emission Spectroscopy (RXES) is used to characterize the ligand field states of the prototypic self-assembled square-planar complex, [Pt(tpy)Cl]Cl (tpy=2,2′:6′,2′′-terpyridine), and determine the effect of weak metal-metal and π-π interactions on their energy. © 2012 the Owner Societies
Complex Societies and the Growth of the Law
While a large number of informal factors influence how people interact,
modern societies rely upon law as a primary mechanism to formally control human
behaviour. How legal rules impact societal development depends on the interplay
between two types of actors: the people who create the rules and the people to
which the rules potentially apply. We hypothesise that an increasingly diverse
and interconnected society might create increasingly diverse and interconnected
rules, and assert that legal networks provide a useful lens through which to
observe the interaction between law and society. To evaluate these
propositions, we present a novel and generalizable model of statutory materials
as multidimensional, time-evolving document networks. Applying this model to
the federal legislation of the United States and Germany, we find impressive
expansion in the size and complexity of laws over the past two and a half
decades. We investigate the sources of this development using methods from
network science and natural language processing. To allow for cross-country
comparisons over time, we algorithmically reorganise the legislative materials
of the United States and Germany into cluster families that reflect legal
topics. This reorganisation reveals that the main driver behind the growth of
the law in both jurisdictions is the expansion of the welfare state, backed by
an expansion of the tax state.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures (main paper); 28 pages, 11 figures (supplementary
information
Resource dependent branching processes and the envelope of societies
Since its early beginnings, mankind has put to test many different society
forms, and this fact raises a complex of interesting questions. The objective
of this paper is to present a general population model which takes essential
features of any society into account and which gives interesting answers on the
basis of only two natural hypotheses. One is that societies want to survive,
the second, that individuals in a society would, in general, like to increase
their standard of living. We start by presenting a mathematical model, which
may be seen as a particular type of a controlled branching process. All
conditions of the model are justified and interpreted. After several
preliminary results about societies in general we can show that two society
forms should attract particular attention, both from a qualitative and a
quantitative point of view. These are the so-called weakest-first society and
the strongest-first society. In particular we prove then that these two
societies stand out since they form an envelope of all possible societies in a
sense we will make precise. This result (the envelopment theorem) is seen as
significant because it is paralleled with precise survival criteria for the
enveloping societies. Moreover, given that one of the "limiting" societies can
be seen as an extreme form of communism, and the other one as being close to an
extreme version of capitalism, we conclude that, remarkably, humanity is close
to having already tested the limits.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/13-AAP998 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
The emergent properties of a dolphin social network
Many complex networks, including human societies, the Internet, the World
Wide Web and power grids, have surprising properties that allow vertices
(individuals, nodes, Web pages, etc.) to be in close contact and information to
be transferred quickly between them. Nothing is known of the emerging
properties of animal societies, but it would be expected that similar trends
would emerge from the topology of animal social networks. Despite its small
size (64 individuals), the Doubtful Sound community of bottlenose dolphins has
the same characteristics. The connectivity of individuals follows a complex
distribution that has a scale-free power-law distribution for large k. In
addition, the ability for two individuals to be in contact is unaffected by the
random removal of individuals. The removal of individuals with many links to
others does affect the length of the information path between two individuals,
but, unlike other scale-free networks, it does not fragment the cohesion of the
social network. These self-organizing phenomena allow the network to remain
united, even in the case of catastrophic death events.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Available online from the journal's web-site (See
http://www.pubs.royalsoc.ac.uk/biol_lett/biol_lett.html) as well. To be
printed this yea
Updated management of malignant biliary tract tumors: an illustrative review
The management of malignant biliary tumors (MBTs) is complex and requires a multidisciplinary approach. Guidelines and methods of staging for biliary tumors have recently been released by main international societies, altering the clinical and radiologic approach to this pathologic condition. The aim of the present review is to detail the updated role of imaging in preoperative staging and follow-up and to illustrate clinical/therapeutic pathways. In addition, future perspectives on imaging and targeted/embolization therapies are outlined
Interactive Learning Spaces and Development Policies in Latin America
The emergent “learning economy” is truly global in the sense that it deeply affects the whole world. The emergence of “learning societies”, though, is a process that takes place only in some regions, the patterns followed by this highly complex social process being far from converging. The fact that some societies are becoming learning societies and others are hardly following that type of path is the new and most relevant feature of the development-underdevelopment divide: this is the “learning divide” which is studied in the paper. A main point at stake is that learning is bounded to having opportunities to learn, which are related with access to education and also with possibilities to apply knowledge creatively while interacting in problem solving activities.. The name “interactive learning spaces” is proposed to describe these opportunities. We study them from a Latin American point of view.development, innovation, learning processes
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