Although gonadal testosterone is the principal endocrine factor that promotes masculine traits in mammals, the development of a male phenotype requires local production of both androgenic and oestrogenic signals within target tissues. Much of our knowledge concerning androgenic components of testosterone signalling in sexual differentiation comes from studies of androgen receptor (Ar) loss of function mutants. Here, we review these studies of loss of Ar function and of AR overexpression either globally or selectively in the nervous system of mice. Global and neural mutations affect sociosexual behaviour and the neuroanatomy of these mice in a sexually differentiated manner. Some masculine traits are affected by both global and neural mutation, indica- is remarkable, and it is fair to say that this stems largely from the apt discussion of the findings, which captured the key questions that drive research in this field even today. One of the key conclusions of these studies was that testosterone promotes masculine behavioural traits and removes feminine behavioural traits likely by affecting the nervous system. This is the beginning of the site of action question concerning the action of testosterone in sexual differentiation of brain and behaviour. The assumption that behavioural change was the result of brain change was criticised at the time as being unwarranted because, logically, it was equally likely that sexually differentiated sexual responses could be driven, for example, by sexually differentiated genitalia. A wealth of experimental data has subsequently left no doubt that testosterone sexually differentiates the nervous system structurally, functionally and biochemically, and the field has increasingly focused on the brain as the site of testosterone action in producing masculine behavioural phenotypes. 4 Nonetheless, there is reason to