An exploratory analysis of testosterone, cortisol, and aggressive behavior type in men and women

•Baseline cortisol had a negative association with aggression in women.•The interaction of cortisol with testosterone was associated with aggression in women.•Testosterone and cortisol were largely unrelated to aggression among males. Increasing evidence indicates that the interaction between testos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychology 2021-04, Vol.161, p.108073-108073, Article 108073
Hauptverfasser: Armstrong, Todd, Wells, Jessica, Boisvert, Danielle L., Lewis, Richard H., Cooke, Eric M., Woeckener, Matthias, Kavish, Nicholas
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container_end_page 108073
container_issue
container_start_page 108073
container_title Biological psychology
container_volume 161
creator Armstrong, Todd
Wells, Jessica
Boisvert, Danielle L.
Lewis, Richard H.
Cooke, Eric M.
Woeckener, Matthias
Kavish, Nicholas
description •Baseline cortisol had a negative association with aggression in women.•The interaction of cortisol with testosterone was associated with aggression in women.•Testosterone and cortisol were largely unrelated to aggression among males. Increasing evidence indicates that the interaction between testosterone and cortisol is associated with variation in aggressive behavior. However, results are mixed. The current study further explored the association between testosterone, cortisol, and both reactive and proactive aggression in a large sample of university students. Models considered direct and interactive effects between baseline measures of testosterone and cortisol as well as change in hormones in response to a social stressor. In women, baseline cortisol had a negative direct association with reactive aggression and was further associated with reactive aggression in interaction with baseline testosterone (positive interaction). Hormones were unrelated to reactive aggression in men. Baseline cortisol had a negative direct association with proactive aggression in women. In contrast, the association between change in cortisol and proactive aggression was positive. Cortisol was not associated with proactive aggression in men. In addition, testosterone was not related to proactive aggression either directly or in interaction with cortisol in either men or women. Collectively, these results show that the association between hormones and aggression varies across aggressive behavior type and across sex.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108073
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Aggression
Cortisol
Proactive
Reactive
Testosterone
title An exploratory analysis of testosterone, cortisol, and aggressive behavior type in men and women
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