Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is also evidence that being victorious is not in itself sufficient to provoke a T response. Instead, it has been proposed that T responses are moderated by psychological processes. Here, we investigated whether the opponent's psychological state affected hormonal changes in men competing face to face on a rigged computer task. The results show that, irrespective of outcome, the competition led to increases in heart rate and T levels. We found that the T levels of the participants increased more when their opponents had high self-efficacy and that T levels were not influenced by participants' own psychological state. Furthermore, the T levels of...
Winning competitions has been shown to lead to higher testosterone (T) relative to losing in men and...
<p><b>A</b>. Post-competition cortisol (µg/dL) in winners (n = 28) as a function of Variable A (basa...
Burk CL, Mayer A, Wiese BS. Nail-biters and thrashing wins: Testosterone responses of football fans ...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
AbstractSocial competition is associated with marked emotional, behavioral and hormonal responses, i...
<div><p>Dominance contests are recurrent and widespread causes of stress among mammals. Studies of a...
According to the Challenge Hypothesis, high levels of testosterone (T) are associated with status-se...
It has been proposed in the literature that the testosterone (T) response to competition in humans m...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Elsevier via https://doi.org/10.101...
AbstractSocial competition is associated with marked emotional, behavioral and hormonal responses, i...
Dominance contests are recurrent and widespread causes of stress among mammals. Studies of activatio...
According to the Challenge Hypothesis, high levels of testosterone (T) are associated with status-se...
Testosterone levels are not static but fluctuate in response to environmental inputs, including soci...
Winning competitions has been shown to lead to higher testosterone (T) relative to losing in men and...
<p><b>A</b>. Post-competition cortisol (µg/dL) in winners (n = 28) as a function of Variable A (basa...
Burk CL, Mayer A, Wiese BS. Nail-biters and thrashing wins: Testosterone responses of football fans ...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
Testosterone (T) increases after competition have typically been attributed to winning, yet there is...
AbstractSocial competition is associated with marked emotional, behavioral and hormonal responses, i...
<div><p>Dominance contests are recurrent and widespread causes of stress among mammals. Studies of a...
According to the Challenge Hypothesis, high levels of testosterone (T) are associated with status-se...
It has been proposed in the literature that the testosterone (T) response to competition in humans m...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Elsevier via https://doi.org/10.101...
AbstractSocial competition is associated with marked emotional, behavioral and hormonal responses, i...
Dominance contests are recurrent and widespread causes of stress among mammals. Studies of activatio...
According to the Challenge Hypothesis, high levels of testosterone (T) are associated with status-se...
Testosterone levels are not static but fluctuate in response to environmental inputs, including soci...
Winning competitions has been shown to lead to higher testosterone (T) relative to losing in men and...
<p><b>A</b>. Post-competition cortisol (µg/dL) in winners (n = 28) as a function of Variable A (basa...
Burk CL, Mayer A, Wiese BS. Nail-biters and thrashing wins: Testosterone responses of football fans ...