Authors
Brian M Bird, Shawn N Geniole, Tanya L Procyshyn, Triana L Ortiz, Justin M Carré, Neil V Watson
Publication date
2019/2
Journal
Neuropsychopharmacology
Volume
44
Issue
3
Pages
538-545
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
The social heuristic hypothesis posits that human cooperation is an intuitive response that is expressed especially under conditions of time-constraint. Conversely, it proposes that for individuals given an opportunity for reflection, cooperation is more likely to be curtailed by an optimizing process calibrated to maximize individual benefit in a given situation. Notably, the steroid hormone testosterone has also been implicated in intuitive decision-making, including both prosocial and anti-social behaviors, with effects strongest in men with particular dispositional characteristics. This raises the possibility that increased testosterone may augment the effects predicted by the social heuristic hypothesis, particularly among men higher in specific dispositional characteristics (dominance, impulsivity, independent self-construal: high risk for testosterone-induced antisocial behavior). Here, in a testosterone administration study …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BM Bird, SN Geniole, TL Procyshyn, TL Ortiz, JM Carré… - Neuropsychopharmacology, 2019