Nature & Nurture
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 Published On Sep 11, 2023

Dr. James Roney is a Professor of Psychological & Brain Sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he runs the Human Behavioral Endocrinology Lab.

In this episode we talk about the proximate and ultimate evolutionary explanations of different sex hormones’ roles in coordinating motivated behavior, such as testosterone’s influence on aggression and sex drive, and ovarian hormones’ influence on sex and food drive. We discuss how testosterone leads to sex differentiation in the brain and body both prenatally and during puberty; threshold effects, rather than continuous relationships, between testosterone and motivation; the opposite effects of estradiol and progesterone on women’s sex and food motivation across the menstrual cycle. We also discuss genetic differences in the receptors to different hormones, their interactions with other hormones, and how these subtle differences may predict traits ranging from morphology to sexuality. Lastly, we discuss Jim’s recent research using daily diaries and saliva hormones to test whether daily hormonal fluctuations influence sex drive and other motivated behavior, how smell and pheromones influence attraction in males and females, and how sex hormones influence reward processing in the brain, particularly during puberty.

Timestamps:
0:00:51 Hormones act as coordinators in the body
0:02:06 Example of testosterone's input and output relationships
0:05:41 Importance of understanding the inputs and outputs of hormones
0:07:43 Conservation of hormone functions from non-human species to humans
0:09:35 The role of hormones in motivated behaviors
0:11:19 Time lag between stimulus event and hormone response
0:15:19 Evolutionary theories and mating behavior tied to sex hormones
0:18:23 Evolution and psychological functions of testosterone and oxytocin
0:20:08 Understanding hormone inputs and context for coordinated effects
0:21:58 Oxytocin paradox and effects on maternal aggression
0:23:33 Confounding effects of multiple signals on hormone outputs
0:25:14 Individual variability and receptor sensitivity to testosterone
0:26:47 Genetic polymorphism and developmental calibrators of individual differences
0:28:10 Prenatal testosterone and sexual orientation
0:38:21 Threshold effects of testosterone
0:41:06 Continuous relationship between estradiol, progesterone, sex drive, and food drive in women
0:53:01 Testosterone's effect on reward may be more generalized than estradiol and progesterone
0:54:47 Estradiol may affect satiety mechanisms, not just reward systems.
0:56:56 Theoretical framework for risk taking and impulsivity.
0:58:26 Research on anxiety and depression in females during puberty.
0:59:58 Effects of testosterone on motivation and individual differences
1:08:08 Study on concealed ovulatory timing, pheromones, and scent attractiveness during ovulation

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hormones, coordination, testosterone, inputs, outputs, reproductive success, mating behavior, sexual motivation, aggression, dominance, parsimony, functional theories, evolutionary psychology, biological anthropology, proximate, ultimate, conserved design, non-human species, physiological, psychological, estradiol, progesterone, sex drive, food drive, reward sensitivity, impulsivity, anxiety, pheromones, odor attractiveness, signal detection theory, fertile window, ovulation, attractiveness ratings, signal detection analyses, concealed ovulatory timing, cues, sexual response, sweat stains, attractive, non-ovulating woman, fertile window timing, diagnostic information, detectability, individual specific, concealed ovulation, progesterone suppression hypothesis

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