Wolves provide a good example of dominant behavior and interaction within a social group. Researchers like L. D. have observed wolves' behavior throughout their lives in order to better understand the different leadership and advantages of different species. The leadership and control between wild wolves and captive wolves are different, so both can better understand the two behaviors. Wild wolves, including men and women, are considered "alpha" and are their leaders.
However, this does not mean that wolves do not show social advantage. Mark Bekov, a moralist, immediately intervened when research aimed at eliminating the dominance of dog superiority in today's psychology emerged. He points out that wolves (and other animals including humans) show a dominant position in society; it is not always easy to attribute superior behavior to simple explanations. Dominant behavior and control can be highly contextually represented, and even among the same species, there is a possibility that it may differ significantly between individuals. It is not a whole concept but a simple layered packaging structure to show that wolf's social advantage has been eliminated. Following the same article, Mech pointed out in his 2010 article that he stared at the adult wolf and repeatedly stated that he would cross a men's bag in the half an hour and a half.
The concept of "packaging" and "superiority" related to dog training started in the 1940s and was promoted by new monks in the 1970s. The model is based on the theory that "a dog is a wolf," and a wolf lives in a grade pack where alpha men dominate other people, so humans must dominate dogs to change their behavior. However, recent studies have shown that wild wolves actually live in nuclear families, and fathers and mothers are considered to be the burden leaders. Because young wolves obviously obey their parents' leadership.
The dominant wolves are usually more confident than the lower ranked wolves, but the wolves do not always move around, they always show his status. In most cases they take a neutral attitude and change the expression of control and submission according to the situation of other wolves. (Wolf gives advantage to lower grade animals and yields to higher animals.) An advantageous wolf stands up, looks directly at the other wolves and pushes the ear forward. It lifts its tail (usually it is not much higher than its back unless it is very exciting). Wolves showing obedience look small, lower the tails from other wolves, and fold them further, tilt their ears up and down. This is usually what happens when two wolves meet: wolves can not do their best to fight, and these subtle indications are necessary to maintain social stability.