Mehta Pranjal H, Lawless DesJardins Nicole M, van Vugt Mark, Josephs Robert A
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, United States.
Horm Behav. 2017 Jun;92:141-154. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2017.03.009. Epub 2017 Apr 22.
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition.Testosterone is theorized to influence status-seeking behaviors such as social dominance and competitive behavior, but supporting evidence is mixed. The present study tested the roles of testosterone and cortisol in the hawk-dove game, a dyadic economic decision-making paradigm in which earnings depend on one's own and the other player's choices. If one person selects the hawk strategy and the other person selects the dove strategy, the player who selected hawk attains a greater financial pay-off (status differentiation). The worst financial outcome occurs when both players choose the hawk strategy (status confrontation). Ninety-eight undergraduate students (42 men) provided saliva samples and played ten rounds of the hawk-dove game with another same-sex participant. In support of the hypothesis that testosterone is related to status concern, individuals higher in basal testosterone made more hawk decisions - decisions that harmed the other player. Acute decreases in cortisol were also associated with more hawk decisions. There was some empirical support for the dual-hormone hypothesis as well: basal testosterone was positively related to satisfaction in the game among low basal-cortisol individuals but not among high basal-cortisol individuals. There were no significant sex differences in these hormonal effects. The present findings align with theories of hormones and status-seeking behavior at the individual level, but they also open up new avenues for research on hormone profiles at the collective level. Our results suggest that the presence of two or more high-testosterone members increases the likelihood of status confrontations over a limited resource that can undermine collective outcomes.
对激素与人类竞争特刊的一项贡献。理论上,睾酮会影响寻求地位的行为,如社会主导地位和竞争行为,但支持证据不一。本研究在鹰鸽博弈中测试了睾酮和皮质醇的作用,鹰鸽博弈是一种二元经济决策范式,收益取决于自己和另一个参与者的选择。如果一个人选择鹰策略,另一个人选择鸽策略,选择鹰策略的参与者会获得更大的经济回报(地位分化)。当双方都选择鹰策略时,经济结果最差(地位对抗)。98名本科生(42名男性)提供了唾液样本,并与另一名同性参与者进行了十轮鹰鸽博弈。为支持睾酮与地位关注相关的假设,基础睾酮水平较高的个体做出更多鹰策略决策——即损害对方参与者的决策。皮质醇的急性下降也与更多鹰策略决策相关。对双激素假设也有一些实证支持:基础睾酮与低基础皮质醇个体在游戏中的满意度呈正相关,但与高基础皮质醇个体无关。这些激素效应不存在显著的性别差异。本研究结果与个体层面的激素和寻求地位行为理论一致,但也为集体层面的激素特征研究开辟了新途径。我们的结果表明,两个或更多高睾酮水平成员的存在会增加在有限资源上发生地位对抗的可能性,而这可能会破坏集体结果。