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65 results on '"challenge hypothesis"'

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1. Examining the dual hormone hypothesis in wild male mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei).

2. An Aggressive Interaction Rapidly Increases Brain Androgens in a Male Songbird during the Non-breeding Season.

3. Lean muscle mass, not aggression, mediates a link between dominance rank and testosterone in wild male chimpanzees.

4. Does capacity to produce androgens underlie variation in female ornamentation and territoriality in White-shouldered Fairywren (Malurus alboscapulatus)?

5. Testing the Challenge Hypothesis in Stumptail Macaque Males: The Role of Testosterone and Glucocorticoid Metabolites in Aggressive and Mating Behavior.

6. Beyond a biased binary: A perspective on the misconceptions, challenges, and implications of studying females in avian behavioral endocrinology.

7. Androgen responsiveness to simulated territorial intrusions in Allobates femoralis males: Evidence supporting the challenge hypothesis in a territorial frog.

8. An updated look at the mating system, parental care and androgen seasonal variations in ratites.

9. Bidirectional relationships between testosterone and aggression: a critical analysis of four predictions.

10. Male White-shouldered Fairywrens (Malurus alboscapulatus) elevate androgens greater when courting females than during territorial challenges.

11. Integrating the female masculinization and challenge hypotheses: Female dominance, male deference, and seasonal hormone fluctuations in adult blue-eyed black lemurs (Eulemur flavifrons).

12. Testing hormonal responses to real and simulated social challenges in a competitive female bird.

13. Nesting strategy shapes territorial aggression but not testosterone: A comparative approach in female and male birds.

14. High Seasonal Variation of Plasma Testosterone Levels for a Tropical Grassland Bird Resembles Patterns of Temperate Birds.

15. Rising to the challenge? Inter-individual variation of the androgen response to social interactions in cichlid fish.

16. The challenge hypothesis revisited: Focus on reproductive experience and neural mechanisms.

17. Whither the challenge hypothesis?

18. Who rises to the challenge? Testing the Challenge Hypothesis in fish, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.

19. Is testosterone linked to human aggression? A meta-analytic examination of the relationship between baseline, dynamic, and manipulated testosterone on human aggression.

20. Aggression: Perspectives from social and systems neuroscience.

21. Forebrain Transcriptional Response to Transient Changes in Circulating Androgens in a Cichlid Fish.

22. Challenging the Top Player: A Preliminary Study on Testosterone Response to An Official Chess Tournament.

23. Challenging the challenge hypothesis on testosterone in fathers: Limited meta-analytic support.

24. Nail-biters and thrashing wins: Testosterone responses of football fans during World Cup matches.

25. Fighting Assessment Triggers Rapid Changes in Activity of the Brain Social Decision-Making Network of Cichlid Fish.

26. Network Connections and Salivary Testosterone Among Older U.S. Women: Social Modulation or Hormonal Causation?

27. Pair-bonding, fatherhood, and the role of testosterone: A meta-analytic review.

28. Does a man's testosterone "rebound" as dependent children grow up, or when pairbonds end? A test in Cebu, Philippines.

29. Can estrogens be considered as key elements of the challenge hypothesis? The case of intrasexual aggression in a cichlid fish.

30. Testosterone production and social environment vary with breeding stage in a competitive female songbird.

31. Exogenous Testosterone Enhances the Reactivity to Social Provocation in Males.

32. Territorial aggression in urban and rural Song Sparrows is correlated with corticosterone, but not testosterone.

33. Correlates of androgens in wild male Barbary macaques: Testing the challenge hypothesis.

34. Social and demographic correlates of male androgen levels in wild white-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus capucinus).

35. What can animal research tell us about the link between androgens and social competition in humans?

36. Effects of competition outcome on testosterone concentrations in humans: An updated meta-analysis.

37. Pre-GnRH and GnRH-induced testosterone levels do not vary across behavioral contexts: A role for individual variation.

38. Testosterone production in response to exogenous gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH challenge) depends on social environment and color polymorphism.

39. Territorial aggression does not feed back on testosterone in a multiple-brooded songbird species with breeding and non-breeding season territoriality, the European stonechat.

40. Social Modulation or Hormonal Causation? Linkages of Testosterone with Sexual Activity and Relationship Quality in a Nationally Representative Longitudinal Sample of Older Adults.

41. Socially selected ornaments influence hormone titers of signalers and receivers.

42. Androgen response to social competition in a shoaling fish.

43. Does a short-term increase in testosterone affect the intensity or persistence of territorial aggression? - An approach using an individual's hormonal reactive scope to study hormonal effects on behavior.

44. Intra- and interspecific social challenges modulate the levels of an androgen precursor in a seasonally territorial tropical damselfish.

45. Androgen correlates of male reproductive effort in wild male long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis): A multi-level test of the challenge hypothesis.

46. Individual differences in vagal regulation are related to testosterone responses to observed violence.

47. Behavioral effects of social challenges and genomic mechanisms of social priming: What's testosterone got to do with it?

48. Testosterone response to competition in males is unrelated to opponent familiarity or threat appraisal.

49. Does hierarchy stability influence testosterone and cortisol levels of bearded capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus) adult males? A comparison between two wild groups.

50. Photoperiod modulation of aggressive behavior is independent of androgens in a tropical cichlid fish.

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