Testosterone - The Aggressive Hormone?
Testestorone - The Aggressive Hormone?
- Rats are more aggressive when exposed to testosterone prenatally
- Rats will bite and attack more
- When you castrate male rates the aggression is reduced
- Castrated males lose social dominance (Albert et al., 1986)
- There is also a link between testosterone and aggression in primates (Higley et al., 1966)
- Aim: Is testosterone related to the type of violent crimes males commit?
- Method: Measured testosterone in the saliva of 692 male prisoners
- Looked at the criminal records of the prisoners for violent and non-violent crimes
- Results: Found that testosterone levels predicted violent crimes like homicide and rape
- Conclusion: Testosterone levels may affect the types of violent crimes criminals commit
- Evaluation: What about testosterone and violent crimes in females?
- What about effects of environment like upbringing by parents?
- There is a confounding variable of motivation for committing crimes: senseless violence or acts of vengeance. It is arguably more horrific if someone goes around murdering for fun rather than to right a wrong they feel was done to them
- This study had a huge sample size which is a strength
- It is a correlational study and therefore cannot imply causation
- Aim: Is testosterone related to the type of violent crimes females commit and their behavior in prison?
- Method: Measured testosterone in the saliva of 87 female prisoners
- Looked at the criminal records of the prisoners for violent and non-violent crimes
- Added an extra category of defensive violent which they defined as females being violent towards a perpetrator had abused them in the past
- Results: Found that testosterone levels predicted violent crimes
- Found that testosterone levels were related to their aggressive behavior in prison
- Conclusion: Testosterone levels may affect the violent behavior in and out of prison
- Evaluation: Considering females is a strength
- What about effects of environment like upbringing by parents?
- They fixed the confounding variable of motivation for committing crimes by adding the defensive violence category
- Why didn't they use this category for the men in the 1995 study? Possible gender bias
Testosterone and Aggression Evaluation Studies
- Aim: Do testosterone levels change when you win a wrestling match?
- Method: Measure blood in testsoterone of 12 collegiate wrestlers before and after their match
- Results: Testosterone increased for both winners and losers but the winners had higher increases than the losers
- Conclusion: Suggests that winning increases your testosterone more so than losing does
- Evaluation: Is the testosterone related to how aggressive they were? Or is the testosterone only related to winning the match?
- What about females? Only male wrestlers were used
- This study supports the challenge hypothesis of testosterone which is explained later
- Aim: Do testosterone levels change when you win a chess match?
- Method: Measure testosterone in chess players
- Results: Chess players who won had higher testosterone than players who lost
- Conclusion: Chess is non-violent yet testosterone increased which suggests testosterone may be related to winning and gaining social status rather than just being more aggressive
- Evaluation: What about other non-violent games in other cultures?
- Folk hypothesis of testosterone is that is it linked to aggression
- Aim: Can testosterone lead to fair behavior? Does the belief in the folk hypothesis affect behavior?
- Method: Human females received either testosterone or a placebo
- They played an ultimatum game where participants had to choose how to divide money
- The proposer could be fair or unfair (the dependent variable)
- Results: Females who received testosterone made fair offers
- Females who received placebo made unfair offers
- Females who believed they received testosterone made unfair offers
- Femals who believed they received placebo made fair offers
- Conclusion: There is a social and biological factor at play in terms of testesterone and fairness
- The biological factor of receiving testosterone increases fairness
- The social factor of believing the folk hypothesis of testosterone affects fairness
Testosterone Overall Evaluation
- Testosterone has been linked to aggressive behavior in both animals and humans
- Problem of causality in testosterone and aggression studies
- Does having high testosterone cause you to be violent or does being violent raise your testosterone levels?
- The recent evidence favors a social status function of testosterone related to winning and losing rather than purely aggression
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