Abstract

This study investigated whether men with a history of real‐life aggressive, dominant behavior show increases in testosterone and cortisol levels after brief social contact with women. Furthermore, we tested the prediction that such changes in hormones would be larger than those observed previously in young male students. Sixty‐seven male participants convicted of intimate partner violence (IPV) either had brief social contact with a female confederate (experimental condition) or a male confederate (control condition). We also performed meta‐analyses to investigate whether IPV perpetrators' hormonal responses were larger than the typical responses of young male students in prior studies. All statistical analyses were preregistered. Change in testosterone did not differ across experimental conditions, and testosterone in the IPV perpetrators actually declined from baseline in the female confederate condition. Our meta‐analysis showed that this testosterone decrease was different from the testosterone increase typically observed in young male students. The cortisol levels of IPV perpetrators did not change in response to contact with women. This result was consistent with our meta‐analysis since young male students also did not experience a cortisol change in response to interactions with women. In sum, our findings provide no evidence that male IPV perpetrators exhibit larger hormone increases to brief interactions with women, although it is possible that the men in this sample did not perceive the social contact period as a courtship opportunity. These results suggest that hormone reactivity to social encounters may differ across subject populations and depend on how subjects perceive social situations within laboratory settings.

Highlights

  • There is indirect evidence that testosterone and cortisol levels are relevant for mate acquisition in humans

  • Our findings provide no evidence that male intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetrators exhibit larger hormone increases to brief interactions with women, it is possible that the men in this sample did not perceive the social contact period as a courtship opportunity

  • Our results concerning testosterone did not confirm our predictions: testosterone responses did not differ across the female and male confederate conditions, and in the female condition the testosterone levels of IPV perpetrators declined from baseline

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

There is indirect evidence that testosterone and cortisol levels are relevant for mate acquisition in humans. Another study showed that increases in testosterone levels before brief social contact with women were related to more affiliative behavior (i.e., courtship) toward these women (van der Meij et al, 2012) Currently, it is not clear if this hormonal response is universal across populations other than young male students. One study showed that the testosterone response to brief social contact with women was larger in young male students who self‐reported to have a more aggressive dominant personality (van der Meij et al, 2008). One study showed that the testosterone response to brief social contact with women was larger in young male students who self‐reported a more aggressive dominant personality (van der Meij et al, 2008), raising the possibility that such responses would be larger in IPV offenders. The testosterone and cortisol change in response to brief social contact with women will be larger in men convicted of IPV than in young male students

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