Authors
Lisa LM Welling, Benjamin JP Moreau, Brian M Bird, Steve Hansen, Justin M Carré
Publication date
2016/2/29
Journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Volume
64
Pages
136-142
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Men’s testosterone is associated with several constructs that are linked to dominance rank, such as risk-taking, mating success, and aggression. However, no study has directly tested the relationship between men’s self-perceived dominance and testosterone using an experimental design. We employed a within-subjects, double-blind, placebo-controlled paradigm to assess whether testosterone influences men’s self-perceived dominance. Exogenous testosterone or a placebo was administered to healthy adult men and self-perceptions of physical dominance were subsequently assessed by having participants select what they believed to be their true face from an array of images digitally manipulated in masculinity. Men picked a more masculine version of their own face after testosterone versus placebo—an effect that was particularly pronounced among men with relatively low baseline testosterone. These …
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