School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2013 Mar;38(3):416-24. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2012.07.003. Epub 2012 Jul 31.
The dual-hormone hypothesis posits that the effect of testosterone on social behavior is moderated by cortisol. The present study tested this hypothesis with a competitive reactive aggression paradigm in 53 healthy undergraduate women. Salivary cortisol and testosterone were assessed at baseline. Participants were personally insulted and subsequently given the opportunity to retaliate by administering blasts of white noise to the provocateur. Participants were randomly assigned to win or lose the aggressive competition. Basal testosterone positively predicted reactive aggression and state dominance, but only among participants with high concentrations of basal cortisol. The corresponding, reverse pattern was found for state submissiveness. Winners also had higher concentrations of testosterone than losers following the aggressive competition. We discuss the role of heightened reactivity to social provocation as a possible explanation for these effects.
双激素假说认为,皮质醇会调节睾丸激素对社会行为的影响。本研究通过 53 名健康女大学生的竞争反应性攻击范式来检验这一假说。在基线时评估唾液皮质醇和睾丸激素。参与者受到人身侮辱,随后有机会通过向挑衅者发出白噪声来进行报复。参与者被随机分配赢或输攻击性竞争。基础睾丸激素与反应性攻击和状态优势呈正相关,但仅在基础皮质醇浓度高的参与者中。相应的,状态顺从性则呈现相反的模式。在攻击性竞争后,胜利者的睾丸激素浓度也高于失败者。我们讨论了对社会挑衅反应增强作为这些影响的可能解释的作用。