Despotic societies, sexual attraction and the emergence of male `tolerance': An agent-based model
Authored by Charlotte Hemelrijk
Date Published: 2002-06
DOI: 10.1163/156853902320262790
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Platforms:
Pascal
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Abstract
During the period when females are sexually attractive - but only then - males of certain species of primates, such as chimpanzees, allow females access to resources. Because males are usually dominant over females, such male `tolerance' is explained as a special, reproductive strategy to gain access to females. In this paper a simpler hypothesis is proposed on the basis of an individual-based model (called DomWorld): male `tolerance' towards females arises in `despotic' artificial societies as a kind of `respectful timidity', because sexual attraction automatically increases female dominance over males as a side-effect. The model consists in a homogeneous, virtual world with agents that group and perform dominance-interactions in which the effects of victory and defeat are self-reinforcing. The artificial sexes differ in that VirtualMales have a higher intensity of aggression, they start with a greater capacity to win conflicts than VirtualFemales and they are especially attracted to the opposite sex during certain periods, whereas VirtualFemales are not. I shall explain how the introduction into DomWorld of the attraction of VirtualMales by VirtualFemales leads to female dominance, why it does so only in despotic, but not in egalitarian societies, and how it leads to other phenomena that are relevant to the study of primate behaviour.
Tags
ecology
patterns
egalitarian and despotic society
female dominance
male `tolerance'
paternity
sexual attraction
sexual exchange
chimpanzees
dominance
Monkeys
Rhesus
Macaca
Macaques
Agonistic behavior