“…Comparing stress responses in men and women is complicated by variations related to menstrual cycle. Several studies have investigated responses to cognitive and stressful challenges during different phases of the menstrual cycle (Polefrone & Manuck, 1988; Stoney, Owens, Matthews, Davis, & Caggiula, 1990; Weidner & Helmig, 1990; Tersman, Collins, & Eneroth, 1991; Sita & Miller, 1996; Litschauer et al, 1998; Sato & Miyake, 2004; Carter& Lawrence, 2007; Hlavacova, Wawruch, Isonova, & Jezova, 2008), although only a few have employed the TSST or a similar speech task (Kirschbaum et al, 1995a; Kirschbaum et al, 1999; Pico‐Alfonso et al, 2007). In general, these studies suggest that cardiovascular, subjective, and cortisol responses to stress do not vary across the menstrual cycle (Kirschbaum et al, 1995a; Kirschbaum et al, 1999; Pico‐Alfonso et al, 2007), except for one study which found greater salivary cortisol responses to stress during the luteal phase (Kirschbaum et al, 1999).…”