Self-organization and time-stability of social hierarchies
Joseph Hickey, J\"orn Davidsen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simple theoretical model for social hierarchy formation based on pair-wise interactions, analyzing conditions for stability, and comparing predictions with animal and human societal data.
Contribution
It presents a novel generalized model that explains the emergence and stability of social hierarchies, including high-status classes, through parameters governing interactions.
Findings
Status distributions can be unimodal or totalitarian depending on parameters.
Long-lived intermediary distributions can mimic stable societies.
Model predictions align with animal data and income distributions in humans.
Abstract
The formation and stability of social hierarchies is a question of general relevance. Here, we propose a simple generalized theoretical model for establishing social hierarchy via pair-wise interactions between individuals and investigate its stability. In each interaction or fight, the probability of "winning" depends solely on the relative societal status of the participants, and the winner has a gain of status whereas there is an equal loss to the loser. The interactions are characterized by two parameters. The first parameter represents how much can be lost, and the second parameter represents the degree to which even a small difference of status can guarantee a win for the higher-status individual. Depending on the parameters, the resulting status distributions reach either a continuous unimodal form or lead to a totalitarian end state with one high-status individual and all other…
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