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The politics of testosterone
:D
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%...l.pone.0007543 Quote:
Since years I say that man is not really a creature controlled by reason, but by drives and hormones. It is true for women, too, only that their typical sexual hormones have other results ("babble-syndrome" for example :), a female fetus produces up to seven times as many talk-movements with chin and mouth like a male fetus). From the way we interact with our friends (and pick them) to the interaction with the other sex in all aspects, from buying a new car to to social menners of behaviour: first we are driven by hormones and naturla drives, most often sexual ones. Only secondly we may have learned to counter and balance that a bit with reason - or not. Freud very correctly said that the layer of paint of civilisation that is covering our animalic heritage on the surface, is very, very thin. |
I just gots one thing ta say:
Post hoc ergo propter hoc :nope: |
Yes and no, Platapus, although it may lead a bit beyond this study, maybe I should have made that clear. But when I recall the aggressiveness and poison in the last campaign as well as the passions and emotions that often go far beyond the argument, I cannot avoid the very strong assumption that hormones also play a role not only in reacting to a victors, but also in motivation that goes ahead of the action. Which in case of adrenaline is almost a bagatelle information to mark, no serious scientist would deny it. However, testosterone also is linked to aggression and aggressive behavior.
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In reading the methodology I am concerned about some facts
- There was no sub-sample group that did not participate in the election at all. A null control group. If the null control group experiences no change in testosterone and the "N" was large enough to be representative, then this study might, just might, have some validity. - The saliva was collected in an uncontrolled environment - Some of the participants were drinking alcohol during the study - Comparisons were made (and conclusions also made) with the results of the female test despite: Quote:
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I am finishing up my Doctorate. If I want to make a simple survey, I have to jump through so many academic control gates to ensure statistical and academic integrity it drives you nuts. Then I read so some "study" where the "N" is 183 and the collection of the data is unsupervised/uncontrolled and more than half of the test subjects may be biologically unmeasurable and they are making conclusions. :nope: I am in the wrong school. I gotta transfer to Duke for the easy grades. :D |
This is really bothering you, eh? :D take it easy. the findings are not that sensational that one would want to spend so much thought on them. I would say it pretty muczh tends towards what would have been expected anyway.
And a controlgroup in this case you could not have had, because almost every being in the civilised world knew that the election was held and that Obama was one candidate. Also, some of the things you accuse them of having failed at, they have exmained for sure.For example social surrpunding of alcohol consummation had been separately tested, with a result of "None of these factors absorbed a significant portion of the variance (all Fs<1.0), and the Time x Outcome (Win/Loss) interaction was still significant and of the same magnitude (F(2, 94) = 3.27, p = 0.04). " Also, their conclusion is quite a bit more differentiated than you quote them. All in all they just boost the long-held theory of physiologists and behavior scientists that variations in self esteem are not only a purely cognitive process, but also have strong endocrine component. |
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Have it your way though. No longer worth discussing. |
I loved the irony in it, and the small dose of provocation. :DL
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I love the way Wired reported this:
"Obama Win Turned Male Republicans Into Girlie Men" http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/20...-testosterone/ |
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But anything resembling scentific content apearing in the news has to be taken with a few grains of salt, since the nature of today's news agenies is to simplify to the most any content, so it can be given to anyone in the shortest amon of time possible... I findit hard to see, read or hear an article about anything scientific wich hasn't at least one mistake about the original source, sometimes even turning the original meaning of the discovery completely around... It goes to show that news agencies need better scientific revisers or something like it... |
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