“…In the mammalian male, this dynamic process includes the secretion of androgens by the testes. These steroids, mostly (MacLusky & Naftolin, 1981;MacLusky, Philip, Hurlburt, & Naftolin, 1985), but not exclusively (Lodder & Baum, 1977), through their conversion to estrogens in situ, promote the sexual differentiation of the brain. In males, this differentiation process includes the suppression of cyclicity in gonadotropin secretion (van der Schoot & Zeilmaker, 1972), the inhibition of the expression of lordosis behavior (female sexual behavior) in adulthood (VegaMatuszczyk, Ferna Ândez-Guasti, & Larsson, 1988), the anatomical brain differences that characterize this sex (Gorski, Harlan, Jacobson, Shryne, & Southam, 1980;Guillamo Ân & Segovia, 1993) and the maleoriented differentiation of other behaviors, not necessarily directly related with reproductive phenomena (Konishi & Gurney, 1982).…”