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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Sep 5.
Published in final edited form as: Science. 2011 Jul 15;333(6040):357–360. doi: 10.1126/science.1207120

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Relationship between male dominance rank and glucocorticoid (A, B) and testosterone (C, D) concentrations in stable and in unstable hierarchies, illustrating the similar relationships with dominance rank in both stable and unstable conditions (identified statistically as the absence of a significant interaction between dominance rank and stability; see table 1 and text). Separate GLMM models were created for each condition (stable and unstable) and each hormone. In each case, values on the Y axis represent residuals of log-transformed hormone concentrations from the respective GLMM model, which included age and environmental factors as fixed factors, and male identity as a random factor (23). Each plotted value represents the mean ± SE across male monthly averages. The dotted lines represent the regression lines determined using all the monthly male hormone values. N = number of monthly averages, N = number of males. Sample sizes in A and C and in B and D are the same. Inserts represent the alpha vs. beta comparison using the reduced dataset that included only alpha and beta males. Note that this visualization is not a substitute for the full statistical model results which are presented in table 1.

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