Vanessa Daniele’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 2. Individual DS and Dominance Hierarchy Category. DS ranges from −3 to 3, with 3 representing the highest proportion of wins and −3 representing the highest proportion of losses. Each dot represents an individual mouse.
Figure 3. Proportions of variation accounted for by cage-assignment or social dominance. R2 values of zero/ null are highlighted in red.
Figure 4. Relationship between exploration in open field and social dominance. Each point represents one mouse.
Figure 5. Relationship between fecal glucocorticoid metabolite levels and social dominance. The y-axis scale is different for each sex because the enzyme immunoassay for quantification of metabolites exhibits higher crossreactivity with metabolites secreted by females than males 38 . Each point represents one mouse.
Stability of Hierarchy Type. (a) A stacked column chart representing the number of cages assigned to each dominance hierarchy type. Fill colors are mapped to each hierarchy type depicted in (b). There are no open hierarchies (black) in Fig. 1a.
Social dominance hierarchy type and rank contribute to phenotypic variation within cages of laboratory mice
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September 2019

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A tacit assumption in laboratory animal research is that animals housed within the same cage or pen are phenotypically more similar than animals from different cages or pens, due to their shared housing environment. This assumption drives experimental design, randomization schemes, and statistical analysis plans, while neglecting social context. Here, we examined whether a domain of social context—social dominance—accounted for more phenotypic variation in mice than cage-identity. First, we determined that cages of mice could be categorized into one of three dominance hierarchies with varying degrees of dominance behavior between cage-mates, and low levels of agonistic behavior in the home-cage. Most groups formed dynamic hierarchies with unclear ranks, contrasting with recent accounts of stable transitive hierarchies in groups of mice. Next, we measured some phenotypic traits, and found that social dominance (i.e. dominance hierarchy type and degree of dominance behavior) consistently accounted for some phenotypic variation in all outcome measures, while cage-identity accounted for phenotypic variation in some measures but virtually no variation in others. These findings highlight the importance of considering biologically relevant factors, such as social dominance, in experimental designs and statistical plans.

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Citations (1)


... Further complicating these predictions, patterns of dominance are not phylogenetically constrained; groups within the same species can have different dominance network structures Shizuka & McDonald, 2015). Critically, the behavioral and physiological impacts of dominance rank are expected to depend both on the structure of the dominance hierarchy and on the individual's position within that hierarchical network (Varholick et al., 2019;Williamson et al., 2017). For example, who takes on the initiator role might change depending on the context (Brent et al., 2015;Goll et al., 2023;McComb et al., 2011;Nagy et al., 2013). ...

Reference:

Social dominance influences individual susceptibility to an evolutionary trap in mosquitofish
Social dominance hierarchy type and rank contribute to phenotypic variation within cages of laboratory mice