Eisenegger Christoph, Naef Michael
Institute for Empirical Research in Economics, Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research, University of Zurich.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Mar 2(49):2065. doi: 10.3791/2065.
Behavioral endocrinological research in humans as well as in animals suggests that testosterone plays a key role in social interactions. Studies in rodents have shown a direct link between testosterone and aggressive behavior(1) and folk wisdom adapts these findings to humans, suggesting that testosterone induces antisocial, egoistic or even aggressive behavior(2). However, many researchers doubt a direct testosterone-aggression link in humans, arguing instead that testosterone is primarily involved in status-related behavior(3,4). As a high status can also be achieved by aggressive and antisocial means it can be difficult to distinguish between anti-social and status seeking behavior. We therefore set up an experimental environment, in which status can only be achieved by prosocial means. In a double-blind and placebo-controlled experiment, we administered a single sublingual dose of 0.5 mg of testosterone (with a hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin carrier) to 121 women and investigated their social interaction behavior in an economic bargaining paradigm. Real monetary incentives are at stake in this paradigm; every player A receives a certain amount of money and has to make an offer to another player B on how to share the money. If B accepts, she gets what was offered and player A keeps the rest. If B refuses the offer, nobody gets anything. A status seeking player A is expected to avoid being rejected by behaving in a prosocial way, i.e. by making higher offers. The results show that if expectations about the hormone are controlled for, testosterone administration leads to a significant increase in fair bargaining offers compared to placebo. The role of expectations is reflected in the fact that subjects who report that they believe to have received testosterone make lower offers than those who say they believe that they were treated with a placebo. These findings suggest that the experimental economics approach is sensitive for detecting neurobiological effects as subtle as those achieved by administration of hormones. Moreover, the findings point towards the importance of both psychosocial as well as neuroendocrine factors in determining the influence of testosterone on human social behavior.
人类和动物的行为内分泌学研究表明,睾酮在社交互动中起着关键作用。对啮齿动物的研究显示了睾酮与攻击行为之间的直接联系(1),民间智慧将这些发现应用于人类,认为睾酮会引发反社会、利己甚至攻击行为(2)。然而,许多研究人员怀疑人类中睾酮与攻击行为之间存在直接联系,他们认为睾酮主要参与与地位相关的行为(3,4)。由于高地位也可以通过攻击和反社会手段获得,因此很难区分反社会行为和追求地位的行为。因此,我们建立了一个实验环境,在这个环境中,地位只能通过亲社会手段获得。在一项双盲、安慰剂对照实验中,我们给121名女性舌下单次服用0.5毫克睾酮(以羟丙基-β-环糊精为载体),并在经济讨价还价范式中研究她们的社交互动行为。在这个范式中涉及真实的金钱激励;每个玩家A会得到一定数量的钱,并必须就如何分配这笔钱向另一个玩家B提出报价。如果B接受,她会得到所提供的金额,玩家A保留其余部分。如果B拒绝报价,两人都得不到任何东西。一个追求地位的玩家A预计会通过亲社会行为来避免被拒绝,即提出更高的报价。结果表明,如果对激素的预期得到控制,与安慰剂相比,服用睾酮会导致公平讨价还价报价显著增加。预期的作用体现在这样一个事实上,即报告认为自己接受了睾酮的受试者提出的报价低于那些表示认为自己接受了安慰剂治疗的受试者。这些发现表明,实验经济学方法对于检测像激素给药所产生的那样微妙的神经生物学效应很敏感。此外,这些发现指出了社会心理因素和神经内分泌因素在确定睾酮对人类社会行为影响方面的重要性。