Manchester, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  416
    What Holds Groups Together? How Interdependence Shapes Group Living
    with Angelica Kaufmann, Liran Samuni, and John Michael
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 2025.
    Dunbar’s emphasis on dyadic relationships in group formation overlooks the roles of interdependence and joint commitment in social cohesion. We challenge his premise by highlighting the importance of group-level processes, particularly where top-down group pressures like cooperative breeding and out-group threat can induce joint commitment as an alternate means to sustain group cohesion.
  •  35
    Revisiting the spaces of societies and the cooperation that sustains them
    with Liran Samuni
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 48. 2025.
    We embrace Moffett's call for more rigorous definitions of social organizations but raise two intersecting critiques: (1) The spaces controlled by societies are not exclusively physical, and (2) cooperation is required to maintain control over spaces, physical or otherwise. We discuss examples of non-physical societal spaces across species and highlight the top-down group cooperation challenge that is maintaining them.