“…Although these tests reveal behaviour characteristics of individual mice and the relationship between two individuals at a given point in time, they do not provide information about how relationships develop over time or how relationships are adjusted within a large social network. Dominance in pairs of mice is usually assessed with dyadic tubetests (van den Berg, Lamballais, & Kushner, 2015;Curley, 2011;Wang et al, 2011), food, sex or other reward competition tests (Benner, Endo, Endo, Kakeyama, & Tohyama, 2014;Jupp et al, 2015;Nelson, Cunningham, Ruff, & Potts, 2015) and aggression tests (Branchi et al, 2013;Ginsburg & Allee, 1942). Problematically, results in these social contexts do not necessarily relate to overall social dominance within a larger group context where relationships are embedded (Chase, 1982b).…”