1 Department of Psychology, Nipissing University , 100 College Drive, North Bay, Ontario, Canada P1B8L7.
2 Department of Basic Psychological Research and Research Methods, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna , Liebiggasse 5, 1160 Vienna , Austria.
Proc Biol Sci. 2019 May 29;286(1903):20190720. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2019.0720.
Like other animals, humans are sensitive to facial cues of threat. Recent evidence suggests that we use this information to dynamically calibrate competitive decision-making over resources, ceding more to high-threat individuals (who appear more willing/able to retaliate) and keeping more from low-threat individuals. Little is known, however, about the biological factors that support such threat assessment and decision-making systems. In a pre-registered, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over testosterone administration study ( n = 118 men), we show for the first time that testosterone reduces the effects of threat on decision-making: participants ceded more resources to high-threat (versus low-threat) individuals (replicating the 'threat premium'), but this effect was blunted by testosterone, which selectively reduced the amount of resources ceded to those highest in threat. Thus, our findings suggest that testosterone influences competitive decision-making by recalibrating the integration of threat into the decision-making process.
与其他动物一样,人类对外貌威胁的线索非常敏感。最近的证据表明,我们利用这些信息来动态调整对资源的竞争决策,给予高威胁个体(看起来更愿意/能够报复)更多,而给予低威胁个体更少。然而,人们对支持这种威胁评估和决策系统的生物学因素知之甚少。在一项预先注册的、双盲的、安慰剂对照的交叉睾酮给药研究(n=118 名男性)中,我们首次表明,睾酮会降低威胁对决策的影响:参与者给予高威胁(与低威胁)个体更多的资源(复制了“威胁溢价”),但睾酮会削弱这种影响,睾酮选择性地减少了给予那些威胁最大的个体的资源数量。因此,我们的研究结果表明,睾酮通过重新校准威胁与决策过程的整合来影响竞争决策。