No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 November 2025
Human social networks are far larger than those of nonhuman primates. Maintaining cohesion in large networks requires a robust mechanism that can accommodate the dense webs of connections within communities. A parsimonious account of how humans achieve social cohesion is mental abstraction, which enables individuals to construct fuzzy network representations that facilitate information flow tracking and mitigate conflict.
Target article
Mental abstraction aids group cohesion in large social networks
Related commentaries (1)
Structural and Cognitive Mechanisms of Group Cohesion in Primates