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Abstract(s)
The individual time patterns of salivary testosterone of
adult healthy men, self-reported sexual behavior and
their co-occurrence with regular weekly or monthly intervals
were studied. Twenty-seven volunteer males
(mean age 33 1 years) collected daily morning saliva
over a period of 90 days. Evening questionnaires provided
daily information on sexual activity. From the saliva,
testosterone immunoreactive substances were determined
using enzyme immunoassay. To detect events
in which increases of testosterone were associated with
sexual activity and at the same time controlling for regular
internal patterns in men, data were analyzed using
Theme software. First results indicated a varying number
of complex nonrandom interaction patterns of testosterone
with sexual activity, but also with weekly (i.e.,
Saturdays) and monthly intervals (i.e., 28-day full-moon
intervals). The social context of the occurrence of specific
pattern combinations was elaborated using parameters
from the men’s self-reported general life history
profiles. Peak hormone levels occurred around weekends
in the majority of the males. The 28-day monthly
interval coincided with testosterone peaks only in those
of the paired men who reported a current wish for children
(“prospective fathers”), but not in unpaired men or
in those who did not wish to have children with their
current partner. Rather than representing a direct regular
pattern of the male testosterone per se, the observed
patterns suggest that men have the facultative potential
to adjust their testosterone responses to their female
partner’s cycle. In line with the interactions between
behavior and androgens observed in vertebrates in general,
this study adds an example of the mutual character
of hormone–behavior interactions and, thus, for the social
context of testosterone patterns in human males.
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Citation
Hormones and Behavior, 42, 172-181