Women university students’ stereotypical assessments of potential women threatening rivals: Testosterone and cortisol effects on perception and judgment.
Leonor Estela Hernández-López,
Mónica Dafne García-Granados,
Roberto Chavira-Ramírez
et al.
Abstract:Testosterone and cortisol in women are involved in regulating social and sexual behavior. So far, research shows that the interaction of these hormones modulates dominant and submissive personalities, empathy, and reactive aggression. In this study, we investigated whether women's testosterone and cortisol contribute to attributing different characteristics of sexual threatening, attractiveness, success, dominance, and flirtatiousness to female morphs that vary in waist-to-hip ratio (WHR; 0.6, 0.7, 0.8) after … Show more
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