“…Studies have shown that females, on average, exhibit higher levels of HPA axis activity (Young, Korszun, Figueiredo, Banks-Solomon, & Herman, 2007) and lower levels of serotonin activity than males (Biver et al, 1996;Fischette, Biegon, & McEwen, 1983;Rubinow, Schmidt, & Roca, 1998). Further, nonhuman primate research has revealed that maltreated subjects who carry a copy of the short allele exhibit lower levels of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, exhibit higher levels of ACTH responses to stress, and exhibit more aggressive and anxious behaviors in response to stress than maltreated subjects who do not carry a copy of the short allele (Maestripieri, 2005;McCormack et al, 2009). These negative effects have been shown to be more pronounced for females than males (Barr, Newman, Schwandt, et al, 2004).…”