Sustainable Development Goals
Abstract/Objectives
Social hierarchy is associated with various phenotypes. Although memory is known to be important for hierarchy formation, the difference in memory abilities between dominant and subordinate individuals remains unclear. In this study, we examined memory performance in mice with different social ranks and found better memory abilities in dominant mice, along with greater long-term potentiation and higher memory-related gene expression in the hippocampus. Daily injection of memory-improving drugs could also enhance dominance. To validate this correlation across species, through inventory, behavioral and event-related potential studies, we identified better memory abilities in preschool children with higher social dominance. Better memory potentially helped children process dominance facial cues and learn social strategies to acquire higher positions. Our study shows a remarkable similarity between humans and mice in the association between memory and social hierarchy and provides valuable insight into social interactions in young animals, with potential implications for preschool education.
Results/Contributions

1. Research results published in top international journals: Communications Biology (IF=6.628)

2. The results of this research have received a lot of attention from the news media, including Liberty, United, Apple, Science and Technology News, and ET today, as well as Taipei Times, AFP Network, Yahoo, Finance Network and Morningstar. The findings of this research were also published in national news in five other languages including Indonesian, Vietnamese, Thai, and Hindi.

3. The leaders of the project were interviewed by TTV, Times News and China Radio.

4. The findings of this scientific research can help improve social well-being and influence education policies (remind that the education system should not only focus on competition, but also pay attention to the fairness and justice of resource allocation, and pay more attention to the situation of children with weaker cognitive abilities and assistance).

Keywords
Social hierarchylearningmemoryyoung childrenyoung mice
References
1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-022-03173-7

Chou, Y. J.*, Ma, Y. K., Lu, Y. H., King, J. T., Tsai, W. S., Yang, S. B., & Kuo, T. H.* (2022). Potential cross-species correlations in social hierarchy and memory between mice and young children. Communications Biology, 5(1), 1-14. (SCIE) IF=6.268

Media Information
1.
Contact Information
周育如
chouyuju@mx.nthu.edu.tw