Just as humans can follow complex social situations in deciding who to befriend or to abandon, it turns out that animals use the same level of sophistication in judging social
configurations2, according to a new study that advances our understanding of the structure of animal social networks. The study, which appears today in the journal Animal Behaviour, is the first in which researchers
applied3 a long-standing theory in social
psychology4 called "
structural5 balance," which is used to
analyze6 human relationships, to an animal population to better understand the
mechanisms7 that determine the structure of animal social groups. Researchers
analyzed8 social bonds in behavioral data from a long-term study of the rock
hyrax(蹄兔,岩狸), a small mammal that lives in colonies across Africa and the Middle East.
Structural balance theory considers the positive or negative ties between three individuals, or triads, and suggests that "the friend of my enemy is my enemy" triangle is more stable and should be more common than "the friend of my friend is my enemy" triangle. Another
configuration1, "the friend of my friend is my friend," is considered to also be a stable configuration in the social network. The last possible triangle, "the enemy of my enemy is my enemy,"
presages9 an
unstable10 state, according to the theory.
The potential power of structural balance theory is its ability to predict patterns in the structure of the whole social network and also predict changes that occur over time, as unstable triads are expected to change to stable ones.
"We all live in social networks of some kind, either online or offline, and we are interested in understanding how these groups form and dissolve and their internal
dynamics11, but while studying these human dynamics is important, it's also very difficult and in many cases
impractical12. So we study how sociality evolved in animals, which might offer us some insights into our own social behavior. And indeed, the structural balance theory that was developed to study human behavior appears to be relevant in animals as well," said the study's lead author Amiyaal Ilany, a postdoctoral fellow at the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis.