Food sharing networks in lowland Nicaragua: An application of the social relations model to count data
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] A. Hurtado,et al. Food Transfers Among Hiwi Foragers of Venezuela: Tests of Reciprocity , 2000 .
[2] Brian M Wood,et al. Household and Kin Provisioning by Hadza Men , 2013, Human nature.
[3] Michael Gurven,et al. Reciprocal altruism, rather than kin selection, maintains nepotistic food transfers on an Ache reservation , 2008 .
[4] Jeremy Koster,et al. Hypothetical rankings of prospective husbands for female kin in lowland Nicaragua: consensus analysis indicates high agreement and associations with wealth and hunting skill , 2011 .
[5] Peter D. Hoff,et al. Bilinear Mixed-Effects Models for Dyadic Data , 2005 .
[6] John M. Thompson,et al. Bayesian Analysis in Stata with WinBUGS , 2006 .
[7] Andrew Thomas,et al. WinBUGS - A Bayesian modelling framework: Concepts, structure, and extensibility , 2000, Stat. Comput..
[8] Michael Gurven,et al. WHY DO FORAGERS SHARE AND SHARERS FORAGE? EXPLORATIONS OF SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF FORAGING , 2004 .
[9] Michael D. Ward,et al. Persistent Patterns of International Commerce , 2007 .
[10] Monique Borgerhoff Mulder,et al. The Use of Quantitative Observational Techniques in Anthropology [and Comments and Replies] , 1985, Current Anthropology.
[11] Friederike Range,et al. Familiarity and dominance relations among female sooty mangabeys in the Taï National Park , 2002, American journal of primatology.
[12] M. Alvard,et al. Kinship and Cooperation , 2009 .
[13] E. Smith,et al. Analyzing adaptive strategies: Human behavioral ecology at twenty‐five , 2000 .
[14] Raymond Hames,et al. Meal sharing among the Ye’kwana , 2007, Human nature.
[15] Mark S. Granovetter. Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.
[16] de Waal FB. Attitudinal reciprocity in food sharing among brown capuchin monkeys. , 2000, Animal behaviour.
[17] Ian C. Gilby,et al. Meat sharing among the Gombe chimpanzees: harassment and reciprocal exchange , 2006, Animal Behaviour.
[18] Paul L. Hooper,et al. The structure of energy production and redistribution among Tsimane' forager-horticulturalists , 2011 .
[19] M. Gurven. To give and to give not: The behavioral ecology of human food transfers , 2004, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
[20] F. Marlowe,et al. The Hadza: Hunter-Gatherers of Tanzania , 2010 .
[21] Bernard Nietschmann,et al. Between Land and Water: The Subsistence Ecology of the Miskito Indians, Eastern Nicaragua , 1973 .
[22] David A. Nolin,et al. Food-Sharing Networks in Lamalera, Indonesia: Status, Sharing, and Signaling. , 2012, Evolution and human behavior : official journal of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society.
[23] James F. O'Connell,et al. Family Provisioning Is Not the Only Reason Men Hunt , 2010, Current Anthropology.
[24] Michael Gurven,et al. Natural cooperators: Food sharing in humans and other primates , 2013, Evolutionary anthropology.
[25] Jeremy Koster,et al. The impact of hunting with dogs on wildlife harvests in the Bosawas Reserve, Nicaragua , 2008, Environmental Conservation.
[26] Mark Huisman,et al. Statistical Models for Ties and Actors , 2011 .
[27] David J. Lunn,et al. The BUGS Book: A Practical Introduction to Bayesian Analysis , 2013 .
[28] R. BliegeBird,et al. Signaling Theory, Strategic Interaction, and Symbolic Capital1 , 2005, Current Anthropology.
[29] T. Lewis,et al. Outliers in multilevel data , 1998 .
[30] S. Macfarlan,et al. Competitive Altruism Explains Labor Exchange Variation in a Dominican Community , 2012, Current Anthropology.
[31] J. Mitani,et al. Reciprocal exchange in chimpanzees and other primates , 2006 .
[32] Stefano Livi,et al. A componential analysis of leadership using the social relations model , 2009 .
[33] Anthony S. Bryk,et al. Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods , 1992 .
[34] Rosalía Pastor-Nieto,et al. Grooming, kinship, and co‐feeding in captive spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) , 2001 .
[35] Sewall Wright,et al. Coefficients of Inbreeding and Relationship , 1922, The American Naturalist.
[36] Michael Gurven,et al. Moving beyond Stereotypes of Men's Foraging Goals , 2010, Current Anthropology.
[37] C. V. van Schaik,et al. Tolerant food sharing and reciprocity is precluded by despotism among bonobos but not chimpanzees. , 2010, American journal of physical anthropology.
[38] Pat Barclay,et al. The evolution of charitable behaviour and the power of reputation , 2011 .
[39] Bram Tucker,et al. Do Risk and Time Experimental Choices Represent Individual Strategies for Coping with Poverty or Conformity to Social Norms? , 2012, Current Anthropology.
[40] Kay E. Holekamp,et al. Rank-related partner choice in the fission–fusion society of the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) , 2007, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[41] D. Kashy,et al. Conceptual and Methodological Issues in the Analysis of Data from Dyads and Groups , 2012 .
[42] John Q. Patton. Meat sharing for coalitional support , 2005 .
[43] Joseph Henrich,et al. Chimpanzees share food for many reasons: the role of kinship, reciprocity, social bonds and harassment on food transfers , 2013, Animal Behaviour.
[44] Jeremy Koster,et al. Hunting with Dogs in Nicaragua: An Optimal Foraging Approach , 2008, Current Anthropology.
[45] Mary W. Helms,et al. Asang. Adaptations to Culture Contact in a Miskito Community , 1972 .
[46] D. A. Kenny,et al. Dyadic Data Analysis , 2006 .
[47] Bradley P. Carlin,et al. Bayesian measures of model complexity and fit , 2002 .
[48] R. Trivers. The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism , 1971, The Quarterly Review of Biology.
[49] Bram Tucker,et al. GIVING, SCROUNGING, HIDING, AND SELLING: MINIMAL FOOD SHARING AMONG MIKEA OF MADAGASCAR , 2004 .
[50] David A. Nolin. Food-Sharing Networks in Lamalera, Indonesia , 2010, Human nature.
[51] E. Smith,et al. Turtle hunting and tombstone opening. public generosity as costly signaling. , 2000, Evolution and human behavior : official journal of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society.
[52] Jeremy Koster,et al. Hunting and Subsistence Among the Mayangna and Miskito of Nicaragua's Bosawas Biosphere Reserve , 2006 .
[53] Steven J. Schwager,et al. A comparison of association indices , 1987, Animal Behaviour.
[54] H. Goldstein. Multilevel Statistical Models , 2006 .
[55] W. Hamilton. The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I. , 1964, Journal of theoretical biology.
[56] P. S. Gill,et al. Statistical analyses for round robin interaction data , 2001 .
[57] Bruce Winterhalder,et al. Diet choice, risk, and food sharing in a stochastic environment , 1986 .
[58] John C. Avise,et al. Adaptive Specializations, Social Exchange, and the Evolution of Human Intelligence , 2010 .
[59] J. Ziker,et al. Food Sharing at Meals Kinship , Reciprocity , and Clustering in the Taimyr Autonomous Okrug , Northern Russia , 2005 .
[60] D. A. Kenny,et al. Interpersonal Perception: A Social Relations Analysis , 1988 .
[61] Paul L. Hooper,et al. From the womb to the tomb: The role of transfers in shaping the evolved human life history , 2012, Experimental Gerontology.
[62] J. Thompson,et al. Bayesian Analysis in Stata using WinBUGS , 2006 .
[63] B. Winterhalder. A marginal model of tolerated theft , 1996 .
[64] Jeremy Koster,et al. Interhousehold Meat Sharing among Mayangna and Miskito Horticulturalists in Nicaragua , 2011, Human nature.
[65] D. E. Stuart,et al. Food Sharing Among Ache Foragers: Tests of Explanatory Hypotheses [and Comments and Reply] , 1985, Current Anthropology.
[66] M. Gurven,et al. From Forest to Reservation: Transitions in Food-Sharing Behavior among the Ache of Paraguay , 2002, Journal of Anthropological Research.
[67] Bruce Winterhalder,et al. Effects on Household Labor of Temporary Out-migration by Male Household Heads in Nicaragua and Peru: an Analysis of Spot-check Time Allocation Data Using Mixed-effects Models , 2013 .
[68] Tom A. B. Snijders,et al. The social relations model for family data: A multilevel approach , 1999 .
[69] R. Hanneman. Introduction to Social Network Methods , 2001 .
[70] G. Wilkinson. Reciprocal food sharing in the vampire bat , 1984, Nature.
[71] D. A. Kenny,et al. Dyadic data analysis using multilevel modeling. , 2010 .
[72] T. Snijders. Stochastic actor-oriented models for network change , 1996 .
[73] D. A. Kenny,et al. The Social Relations Model: How to Understand Dyadic Processes , 2010 .
[74] Roel Bosker,et al. Multilevel analysis : an introduction to basic and advanced multilevel modeling , 1999 .
[75] Michael D. Ward,et al. Gravity's Rainbow: A dynamic latent space model for the world trade network , 2013, Network Science.
[76] M. Alvard,et al. Kinship, lineage, and an evolutionary perspective on cooperative hunting groups in Indonesia , 2003, Human nature.
[77] Ulrich Trautwein,et al. A general and flexible approach to estimating the social relations model using Bayesian methods. , 2013, Psychological methods.
[78] Harvey Goldstein,et al. Partitioning variation in multilevel models , 2002 .
[79] F. D. Waal,et al. Food sharing and reciprocal obligations among chimpanzees , 1989 .
[80] G. Isaac,et al. The Harvey Lecture Series, 1977-1978. Food Sharing and Human Evolution: Archaeological Evidence from the Plio-Pleistocene of East Africa , 1978, Journal of Anthropological Research.
[81] R. Hames. Garden labor exchange among the Ye'kwana , 1987 .
[82] Christophe Boesch,et al. Long-term reciprocation of grooming in wild West African chimpanzees , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.