Mixture models as a method for comparative sociality: social networks and demographic change in resident killer whales

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Samuel Ellis from the Center for Whale Research, Friday Harbor, WA, USA Centre for and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn have published the paper: Mixture models as a method for comparative sociality: social networks and demographic change in resident killer whales, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
  • what: This approach has revealed many important insights into the proximate formation and ultimate function of animal social structures. The authors develop and illustrate the use of binomial mixture models to quantitatively compare patterns of social association between networks. The authors show that mothers and daughters show reduced social . . .

     

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