4.6 Article

Testosterone Affects Gaze Aversion From Angry Faces Outside of Conscious Awareness

期刊

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
卷 23, 期 5, 页码 459-463

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797611433336

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social interaction; neuroendocrinology; facial expressions; eye movements; aggressive behavior

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Throughout vertebrate phylogeny, testosterone has motivated animals to obtain and maintain social dominance-a fact suggesting that unconscious primordial brain mechanisms are involved in social dominance. In humans, however, the prevailing view is that the neocortex is in control of primordial drives, and testosterone is thought to promote social dominance via conscious feelings of superiority, indefatigability, strength, and anger. Here we show that testosterone administration in humans prolongs dominant staring into the eyes of threatening faces that are viewed outside of awareness, without affecting consciously experienced feelings. These findings reveal that testosterone motivates social dominance in humans in much the same ways that it does in other vertebrates: involuntarily, automatically, and unconsciously.

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