Artiklen diskuterer “Dunbar’s Number,” som foreslår, at mennesker kan opretholde tætte relationer med op til 150 personer. Dette nummer kan påvirke strukturen i militære enheder, hvor effektiv kommunikation og teamwork er afgørende. Læringen er, at sociale bånd er vigtige for effektivitet og samarbejde i grupper.
Titel på undersøgelse:
Why The Infantry Company Is No Larger Than 150 Soldiers
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Hele abstrakt på originalsprog:
150 is about as large a group of people as the human brain can handle in personal relationships, notes a British military commentator.
The story of the importance of stories begins not in leadership, but in anthropology. Robin Dunbar is a British anthropologist, evolutionary psychologist and a specialist in primate behaviour. In the 1990s he identified a correlation between the size of the pre-frontal cortex in ape species and the size of the social groups each species could maintain. If you took the size of an ape’s brain, you could calculate the size of its social group size. This number – the maximum social group size for a given species, based on pre-frontal cortex size – became known as the Dunbar Number.
Hence the limit on the size of an infantry company, he says, as well as on Stone Age farming villages and new religious sects.