Connection
Erik Knight to Testosterone
This is a "connection" page, showing publications Erik Knight has written about Testosterone.
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1.934 |
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Knight EL, Morales PJ, Christian CB, Prasad S, Harbaugh WT, Mehta PH, Mayr U. The causal effect of testosterone on men's competitive behavior is moderated by basal cortisol and cues to an opponent's status: Evidence for a context-dependent dual-hormone hypothesis. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2022 Oct; 123(4):693-716.
Score: 0.597
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Knight EL, Sarkar A, Prasad S, Mehta PH. Beyond the challenge hypothesis: The emergence of the dual-hormone hypothesis and recommendations for future research. Horm Behav. 2020 07; 123:104657.
Score: 0.515
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Knight EL, Christian CB, Morales PJ, Harbaugh WT, Mayr U, Mehta PH. Exogenous testosterone enhances cortisol and affective responses to social-evaluative stress in dominant men. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2017 Nov; 85:151-157.
Score: 0.437
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Knight EL, Graham-Engeland JE, Sliwinski MJ, Engeland CG. Greater Ecologically Assessed Positive Experiences Predict Heightened Sex Hormone Concentrations Across Two Weeks in Older Adults. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2023 05 26; 78(6):1007-1017.
Score: 0.163
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Prasad S, Knight EL, Mehta PH. Basal testosterone's relationship with dictator game decision-making depends on cortisol reactivity to acute stress: A dual-hormone perspective on dominant behavior during resource allocation. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2019 03; 101:150-159.
Score: 0.119
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Knight EL, Mehta PH. Hierarchy stability moderates the effect of status on stress and performance in humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 01 03; 114(1):78-83.
Score: 0.104