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Status, Prestige and Social Dominance

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Title: Status, Prestige and Social Dominance


1
Status, Prestige and Social Dominance
  • Nicole Thurston

2
Objectives
  • Learn about status, prestige, and social
    dominance
  • Learn how these relate today and how they applied
    to our ancestors
  • Learn about non-human behaviors
  • Think critically about questions involving our
    social interactions and how/if our interactions
    apply to the evolutionary perspective
  • To have fun! ?

3
Humans are Social Beings
  • Social interactions
  • Large potential fitness
  • Large potential fitness costs
  • Limits on the size of an individuals social
    network means some social interactions preclude
    others
  • Costs may be enacted when benefits of sociality
    are threatened

4
Development of Hierarchies
  • All-out fighting
  • Foolish strategy for humans
  • Costs for victor
  • Costs for loser
  • Do you think there are any positive outcomes to
    fighting?
  • Selection favors the assessment of abilities
  • Complex process which involves socialization,
    allies, etc.
  • Dominance hierarchies
  • Secure access to resources
  • Production hierarchies
  • People working together to achieve a group goal

5
Status and Dominance Hierarchies
  • Fisek and Ofshe, 1970
  • Groups of people previously unknown to each other
  • 50 developed clear hierarchy w/in 1 minute
  • Other 50 in 5 minutes
  • Members of groups can assess future status w/in a
    new group just by looking at other members
    (Kalma, 1991)
  • Study of tennis players

6
Non-human Hierarchies
  • Pecking Order
  • Hens
  • Crayfish
  • Size up their rivals
  • Change in nervous system
  • Reluctance to go from dominance to
  • subordinance
  • Chimpanzees
  • Submissive acts grunts, kissing, bring gifts
  • Dominant male makes himself appear larger
  • Dominant male also has increased sexual access
  • Important to note Hierarchies are not static,
    nor are they based on size of primate.
  • http//www.wildchimps.org/wcf/suedgruppe/videoclip
    .htm
  • http//www.youtube.com/results?search_querychimpa
    nzeesocializing

7
Status Hierarchies in Adolescence
  • Priority of access to resources in competitive
    situations
  • School shootings
  • The jocks rule the school
  • Are they going to accept me?
  • Its a rat race inside the school to see whos
    going to be more popular.
  • Columbine Clip
  • Why did they do it?
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vGFdqXxv4vsM

8
Status Hierarchies in Adolescence
  • Hormonal change
  • Triggers aggression and risky behaviors in
    adolescent boys
  • Physical maturity / Economic immaturity
  • Teenage male frustrations are a new concept
  • Aggressive energy is needed to meet challenges of
    entering adult life
  • Do you think recent adolescent crimes are due to
    a lack of economic maturity and a desire to gain
    status in the world?

9
Status Seeking
  • Willingness to take risks
  • Necessary in status competition
  • A race car driver at the 24-hour LeMans race,
    when asked why he always drove his car right at
    the edge of a curve, inches from death, replied
    that if you dont drive that way, you lose the
    race. (Bridgeman, p. 190)

10
  • Do all high status individuals take some sort of
    risk to get where they are todayor are there
    other factors that may contribute to status?

11
How did you develop your status?
  • Born into classes?
  • Caste System Hindus
  • Do you actively seek
  • your status?
  • A Place in the Sun
  • Clip The New Guy
  • Is it that easy to gain status?
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5KQQvz3MP64

12
Specific Physiological Mechanisms
  • Neuroendocrine responses to challenge
  • Autonomic Nervous System releases Cortisol
    Adrenaline
  • Competitive games (player or observer)
  • SES and neuroendocrine activity
  • Perceived social status compared to others
  • Higher baseline cortisol levels, more sensitive
    stress response during conflict

13
Therefore
  • Neuroendocrine responses are bidirectional
  • Perceived social status influences hormone levels
  • Hormone levels change an individuals perceived
    social status and their interaction with the world

14
  • AIDS

15
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16
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17
  • Schizophrenia

18
Status and Health (Buss, 2005)
  • Infectious disease and disability
  • Results in disgust and avoidance of unhealthy
    individuals
  • Costs of failing to ID health threats
  • Leads to human bias in the direction of
    overperception of threat
  • Mechanism designed to protect people from
    contagion.
  • From an EP this makes sense. However, what about
    individuals who choose to work with the disabled
    and chronically ill? (Rehabilitators, Doctors)

19
Sex Differences in Status Striving
  • MUCH more prevalent among men than women
  • Stronger selection pressure to succeed in
    reproduction
  • Direct relationship between status and
    reproductive success
  • Ceiling for male reproduction is much higher than
    for women
  • Investment in pregnancy and lactation
  • Female reproduction is limited by access to
    resources
  • Male reproduction is limited by access to mates

20
Sex Differences in Status Striving
  • Buss suggests that high status women may also
    maintain higher reproductive advantages.
  • Do you agree?
  • Would lower status
  • men find higher status
  • women more
  • intimidating?
  • A Polygamy reversal

21
Status Access to Mates
  • Nobles, Princes, etc.
  • Harems of Women
  • Middle Class men
  • 3-4 women
  • In Western cultures where monogamy higher
    status women are present, high-status men are
    still preferred as mates and partners in affairs.
    (Baker Bellis, 1995 Perusse, 1993)
  • Any thoughts as to why this might be?

22
Preference for Dominant Males
  • Research by Bereczkei et al., 1997
  • Women prefer altruistic males for long-
  • term mates
  • Women prefer brave, non-altruistic, risk-prone
    males for short-term mates
  • Females found dominant males to be very sexually
    attractive, but men did not find dominance in
    females to be sexually attractive
  • In a way this seems to perpetuate a gender role
  • society.

23
Dominance Motivation
  • Social Dominance Orientation (SDO)
  • (Pratto, Sidanius, Stallworth, 1993)
  • A scale which described preference for social
    hierarchies
  • Those who score high on scale endorse group
    dominance over other groups
  • SDO should be higher in men
  • Access to Women
  • Women select for men with high SDO

24
Social Dominance Orientation
  • From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense
    that ancestral women would prefer a mate with a
    higher SDO. Why do these results reign true
    today, even in egalitarian cultures?

25
  • How do you exert your authority?

26
Gender Differences in Expression of Dominance
  • Prosocial Dominant Acts versus Egoist Dominant
    Acts
  • Women think Prosocial Dominant Acts are more
    socially desirable
  • And actually performed more of these tasks
  • Whereas
  • Men think Egoist Dominant Acts are more socially
    desirable
  • And actually performed more of these tasks

27
Continuation of this study by Megargee (1969)
  • Paired high-dominant man/low-dominant man
  • Paired high-dominant woman/low-dominant woman
  • Paired high-dominant man/low-dominant woman
  • Paired high-dominant man/low-dominant man
  • Participants of groups were told they had to work
    together to repair a box given to them as quickly
    as possible

28
Results Who became the leader?
  • 75 high-dom. men and 70 women emerged as
    leaders with their same sex
  • 20 high-dom. men when paired with low-dom. women
    emerged as leaders
  • Only 20 high-dom. women when paired with
    low-dom. men emerged as leaders
  • WHY?
  • Appointing of position group oriented goals

29
  • How do these gender differences in leadership and
    dominance play a role in todays society?
  • How about from an evolutionary perspective?

30
Relational Aggression
  • Women may express social dominance in a less
    overt, less physical, and more emotional way
  • Men express social dominance
  • in more physical and overt
  • ways
  • Laguna Beach clip
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vL8Ksl79V5posearch
    Laguna20Beach

31
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32
Dominance Theory
  • Selection favors dominance, but also favors
    subordinate strategies to displace the dominant
    person
  • Dominance Theory has two main propositions
  • 1. There are social norms regarding permissions,
    obligations, and prohibitions
  • 2. These emerge before reasoning strategies
  • Deontic versus indicative reasoning

33
Dominance Theory
  • Allows children to organize transitive dominance
    hierarchies
  • A gt B gt C A is greater than C
  • Social reasoning is strongly influenced by rank
  • Evolved selective attention and memorial storage
    mechanisms
  • Cheater Study
  • What are the benefits of these mechanisms?

34
Dominance Theory
  • Other studies
  • Anger or frustration increases blood pressure
  • Aggression towards person who caused anger leads
    to decrease in BP if the person is low status
  • If the person who caused your anger is higher in
    status, you BP will remain high
  • Any thoughts as to why, physiologically, this
    happens?

35
Social Attention-Holding Theory
  • An emotional component of dominance
  • Resource-holding potential
  • Evaluation of yourself
  • Results in attacking, submitting, or fleeing
  • In this sense, dominance is a relationship not
    something possessed by one individual.
  • Social attention-holding potential
  • Competition for quality and quantity of attention
    from others

36
Emotions
  • Going up in rank
  • Elation
  • Increase in helping behavior
  • Loss of status
  • Shame bodily movements coincide with feelings
  • Rage justifies retaliation
  • Envy emulate someone (positive manifestation)
    or belittle your idol (negative manifestation
  • Depression may result in submissiveness

37
Indicators of Dominance
  • Dominant individuals-
  • Stand at full height, dont smile often, speak in
    a loud voice
  • For men, a faster walking pace means higher
    status
  • Evolutionary perspective
  • Are usually tall or are perceived as being tall
  • Higher salary

38
Other correlates of dominance
  • Athleticism
  • Intelligence
  • Physical attractiveness
  • Humorousness
  • Good grooming
  • A broad theory of the determinants of dominance
    is needed to better understand why some people
    are valued more than others.

39
Self-Esteem
  • Sociometer Theory
  • Serves as a gauge for others evaluations
  • From an evolutionary perspective, since humans
    evolved in groups, self-esteem provided a way to
    track the degree one was accepted by others
  • Motivational mechanism
  • Provides accurate self-assessments

40
Submissiveness
  • The idea of deceiving down
  • Actual reduction in self-esteem to help
    facilitate acting in a subordinate manner
  • Adaptive mechanism to avoid threats from the
    dominant
  • Allows one to bide their time until a more
    opportune moment to seek a higher status arises
  • The Downfall of Tall Poppies
  • Experiencing pleasure in anothers misfortune
  • Pleasure is felt when the status of a poppy is
    made salient, especially if the low-status
    individual has low self-esteem
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