Pages that link to "Q35013675"
The following pages link to Neural mechanisms of the testosterone-aggression relation: the role of orbitofrontal cortex (Q35013675):
Displaying 50 items.
- Testosterone administration reduces lying in men (Q21089840) (← links)
- A Positive Affective Neuroendocrinology Approach to Reward and Behavioral Dysregulation (Q26802127) (← links)
- Testosterone Administration Related Differences in Brain Activation during the Ultimatum Game (Q27313193) (← links)
- A quantitative and qualitative review of the effects of testosterone on the function and structure of the human social-emotional brain (Q27315083) (← links)
- The social neuroscience and the theory of integrative levels (Q28084669) (← links)
- Genetic and hormonal sensitivity to threat: testing a serotonin transporter genotype × testosterone interaction (Q28249863) (← links)
- Environmental enrichment preceding early adulthood methylphenidate treatment leads to long term increase of corticosterone and testosterone in the rat (Q28479049) (← links)
- Intergenerational transmission of self-regulation: A multidisciplinary review and integrative conceptual framework. (Q30384821) (← links)
- Honesty mediates the relationship between serotonin and reaction to unfairness (Q30413581) (← links)
- Testosterone is inversely related to brain activity during emotional inhibition in schizophrenia (Q30447434) (← links)
- Testosterone, cortisol, and serotonin as key regulators of social aggression: A review and theoretical perspective (Q30469388) (← links)
- Avoidant Responses to Interpersonal Provocation Are Associated with Increased Amygdala and Decreased Mentalizing Network Activity (Q33836354) (← links)
- Testosterone promotes either dominance or submissiveness in the Ultimatum Game depending on players' social rank (Q33902759) (← links)
- Does competition really bring out the worst? Testosterone, social distance and inter-male competition shape parochial altruism in human males (Q33976021) (← links)
- Testosterone and cortisol jointly regulate dominance: Evidence for a dual-hormone hypothesis (Q34023804) (← links)
- Endogenous testosterone modulates prefrontal-amygdala connectivity during social emotional behavior (Q34166033) (← links)
- Neuroaesthetics and the trouble with beauty (Q34335143) (← links)
- Human preferences for sexually dimorphic faces may be evolutionarily novel (Q34407689) (← links)
- Reducing proactive aggression through non-invasive brain stimulation (Q34462706) (← links)
- Future Research and Clinical Directions in the Field of Men's Mental Health: The Madrid Declaration (Q34540566) (← links)
- Individual differences in vagal regulation are related to testosterone responses to observed violence (Q35115188) (← links)
- Oxytocin and social motivation (Q35258669) (← links)
- Anabolic-androgenic steroids impair set-shifting and reversal learning in male rats (Q35513851) (← links)
- Testosterone is associated with cooperation during intergroup competition by enhancing parochial altruism (Q35678268) (← links)
- Statin Effects on Aggression: Results from the UCSD Statin Study, a Randomized Control Trial (Q35680055) (← links)
- Sex differences in orbitofrontal connectivity in male and female veterans with TBI (Q36074545) (← links)
- Emotion Regulation Difficulties in Boys with Oppositional Defiant Disorder/Conduct Disorder and the Relation with Comorbid Autism Traits and Attention Deficit Traits (Q36078539) (← links)
- Neural systems supporting cognitive-affective interactions in adolescence: the role of puberty and implications for affective disorders (Q36201379) (← links)
- Testosterone Modulates Altered Prefrontal Control of Emotional Actions in Psychopathic Offenders(1,2,3) (Q36555860) (← links)
- Effects of curcumin on the social behavior, blood composition, reproductive hormones in plasma and brain acetylcholinesterase in cadmium intoxicated mice. (Q36652596) (← links)
- Do men's faces really signal heritable immunocompetence? (Q36733532) (← links)
- The pleasure of revenge: retaliatory aggression arises from a neural imbalance toward reward (Q37052220) (← links)
- Pyrrhic victories: the need for social status drives costly competitive behavior (Q37249373) (← links)
- The influence of sex steroids on structural brain maturation in adolescence. (Q37452543) (← links)
- Endogenous testosterone is associated with lower amygdala reactivity to angry faces and reduced aggressive behavior in healthy young women (Q37479534) (← links)
- Acute effects of steroid hormones and neuropeptides on human social-emotional behavior: a review of single administration studies (Q37831635) (← links)
- The multiple systems model of angry rumination (Q38061877) (← links)
- Chronotype-related differences in childhood and adolescent aggression and antisocial behavior--a review of the literature (Q38154634) (← links)
- Single-Dose Testosterone Administration Impairs Cognitive Reflection in Men. (Q38644564) (← links)
- Adolescent Personality as Risk and Resiliency in the Testosterone-Externalizing Association (Q38674715) (← links)
- Deconstructing Anger in the Human Brain (Q38676506) (← links)
- On the Control of Social Approach-Avoidance Behavior: Neural and Endocrine Mechanisms (Q38880767) (← links)
- The role of testosterone and estrogen in consumer behavior and social & economic decision making: A review (Q39007099) (← links)
- Testosterone dynamics and psychopathic personality traits independently predict antagonistic behavior towards the perceived loser of a competitive interaction (Q39333943) (← links)
- The Nature-Nurture Debates: 25 Years of Challenges in Understanding the Psychology of Gender. (Q40739068) (← links)
- Social play in juvenile hamsters alters dendritic morphology in the medial prefrontal cortex and attenuates effects of social stress in adulthood (Q42022162) (← links)
- From provocation to aggression: the neural network. (Q42568275) (← links)
- Development of risk taking: contributions from adolescent testosterone and the orbito-frontal cortex (Q43630682) (← links)
- General Theory versus ENA Theory: Comparing Their Predictive Accuracy and Scope (Q44041732) (← links)
- Physical aggressiveness and gray matter deficits in ventromedial prefrontal cortex (Q45071061) (← links)