The use of multilayer network analysis in animal behaviour
Kelly R. Finn, Matthew J. Silk, Mason A. Porter, and Noa, Pinter-Wollman

TL;DR
This paper reviews how multilayer network analysis can be applied to animal behaviour studies, offering new insights into social structures and individual roles within animal groups.
Contribution
It introduces multilayer network analysis as a novel approach for studying complex animal social systems and provides practical guidance for its application.
Findings
Multilayer analysis can reveal new social structure insights.
Application alters interpretations of individual social roles.
Methodological challenges are discussed.
Abstract
Network analysis has driven key developments in research on animal behaviour by providing quantitative methods to study the social structures of animal groups and populations. A recent formalism, known as \emph{multilayer network analysis}, has advanced the study of multifaceted networked systems in many disciplines. It offers novel ways to study and quantify animal behaviour as connected 'layers' of interactions. In this article, we review common questions in animal behaviour that can be studied using a multilayer approach, and we link these questions to specific analyses. We outline the types of behavioural data and questions that may be suitable to study using multilayer network analysis. We detail several multilayer methods, which can provide new insights into questions about animal sociality at individual, group, population, and evolutionary levels of organisation. We give examples…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Primate Behavior and Ecology · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
