We describe the service-for-prestige theory of leadership, which proposes that voluntary leader-follower relations evolved in humans via a process of reciprocal exchange that generated adaptive benefits for both leaders and followers. We propose that although leader-follower relations first emerged in the human lineage to solve problems related to information sharing and social coordination, they ultimately evolved into exchange relationships whereby followers could compensate leaders for services which would otherwise have been prohibitively costly for leaders to provide. In this exchange, leaders incur costs to provide followers with public goods, and in return, followers incur costs to provide leaders with prestige (and associated fitness benefits). Because whole groups of followers tend to gain from leader-provided public goods, and because prestige is costly for followers to produce, the provisioning of prestige to leaders requires solutions to the "free rider" problem of disrespectful followers (who benefit from leader services without sharing the costs of producing prestige). Thus service-for-prestige makes the unique prediction that disrespectful followers of beneficial leaders will be targeted by other followers for punitive sentiment and/or social exclusion. Leader-follower relations should be more reciprocal and mutually beneficial when leaders and followers have more equal social bargaining power. However, as leaders gain more relative power, and their high status becomes less dependent on their willingness to pay the costs of benefitting followers, service-for-prestige predicts that leader-follower relations will become based more on leaders' ability to dominate and exploit rather than benefit followers. We review evidential support for a set of predictions made by service-for-prestige, and discuss how service-for-prestige relates to social neuroscience research on leadership.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00363 | DOI Listing |
Chaos
January 2025
Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California, Irvine, California 92617, USA.
We propose a novel approach to investigate the brain mechanisms that support coordination of behavior between individuals. Brain states in single individuals defined by the patterns of functional connectivity between brain regions are used to create joint symbolic representations of brain states in two or more individuals to investigate symbolic dynamics that are related to interactive behaviors. We apply this approach to electroencephalographic data from pairs of subjects engaged in two different modes of finger-tapping coordination tasks (synchronization and syncopation) under different interaction conditions (uncoupled, leader-follower, and mutual) to explore the neural mechanisms of multi-person motor coordination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this article, we propose a new formation scheme for a leader-follower unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) system inspired by a human pilot's behavior wherein the formation geometry does not necessarily remain fixed as the vehicles maneuver. In other words, the position and the orientation of the follower with respect to the leader are subject to change as they maneuver while satisfying some constraints. Our strategy ensures that the follower UAV maintains a desired fixed relative distance with respect to the leader UAV, whereas its orientation with respect to the leader UAV may change to reduce its control effort and provide it with a tactical advantage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Effective interprofessional health care team (IHT) members collaborate to reduce medical errors, use resources effectively, and improve patient outcomes, making interprofessional collaboration imperative. Because physicians are often designated as the positional leaders of IHTs, understanding their perspectives on collaboration within IHTs could help to mitigate the disconnects between what is suggested in theory and what is happening in practice. This study aimed to explore leader-follower dynamics within medical teams that are commonly working in clinical care contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
June 2024
School of Marine Science and Technology, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China.
Despite the profound implications of self-organization in animal groups for collective behaviors, understanding the fundamental principles and applying them to swarm robotics remains incomplete. Here we propose a heuristic measure of perception of motion salience (MS) to quantify relative motion changes of neighbors from first-person view. Leveraging three large bird-flocking datasets, we explore how this perception of MS relates to the structure of leader-follower (LF) relations, and further perform an individual-level correlation analysis between past perception of MS and future change rate of velocity consensus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeural Netw
August 2024
School of Artificial Intelligence and Automation, Image Processing and Intelligent Control Key Laboratory of Education Ministry of China, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan 430074, China. Electronic address:
In this paper, the leader-follower robust synchronization issue is mainly addressed for reaction-diffusion neural networks (RDNNs) with multiple leaders and external disturbances under directed graphs. Based on the σ modification approach, we propose a novel distributed adaptive controller by adding a term [Formula: see text] to avoid the phenomenon of parameter drift, that is, the adaptive parameters grow to infinity. Meanwhile, different from the adaptive control algorithm proposed in the undirected graph, we introduce a new function χ(t) to provide additional freedom for the design to achieve robust containment when confronted with external disturbances.
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