Pages that link to "Q33803588"
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The following pages link to Mothers have lower testosterone than non-mothers: evidence from the Philippines (Q33803588):
Displaying 35 items.
- The impact of parenthood on physical aggression: Evidence from criminal data (Q31061553) (← links)
- Social Monogamy in Nonhuman Primates: Phylogeny, Phenotype, and Physiology (Q33365726) (← links)
- Differences in ovarian hormones in relation to parity and time since last birth. (Q33700344) (← links)
- Women who are married or living as married have higher salivary estradiol and progesterone than unmarried women (Q33883790) (← links)
- Urinary oxytocin positively correlates with performance in facial visual search in unmarried males, without specific reaction to infant face. (Q33965493) (← links)
- The Steroid/Peptide Theory of Social Bonds: Integrating testosterone and peptide responses for classifying social behavioral contexts (Q34197062) (← links)
- Testosterone levels are negatively associated with fatherhood [corrected] in males, but positively related to offspring count in fathers. (Q34661830) (← links)
- Endogenous Testosterone and Exogenous Oxytocin Modulate Attentional Processing of Infant Faces. (Q36197481) (← links)
- Marriage and motherhood are associated with lower testosterone concentrations in women (Q36517955) (← links)
- Prospective and dyadic associations between expectant parents' prenatal hormone changes and postpartum parenting outcomes (Q37647168) (← links)
- Measurement of testosterone in human sexuality research: methodological considerations (Q38117541) (← links)
- Beyond masculinity: testosterone, gender/sex, and human social behavior in a comparative context (Q38122598) (← links)
- Functional significance of men's testosterone reactivity to social stimuli (Q38662854) (← links)
- Endocrinology of human female sexuality, mating, and reproductive behavior (Q38793090) (← links)
- Paternal and Maternal Testosterone in Parents of NICU Infants Transitioning Home (Q39254479) (← links)
- Social Modulation or Hormonal Causation? Linkages of Testosterone with Sexual Activity and Relationship Quality in a Nationally Representative Longitudinal Sample of Older Adults (Q39519307) (← links)
- Do testosterone declines during the transition to marriage and fatherhood relate to men's sexual behavior? Evidence from the Philippines (Q43881695) (← links)
- Associations of body size and reproductive factors with circulating levels of sex hormones and prolactin in premenopausal Japanese women (Q44836593) (← links)
- Experiences in the military may impact dual-axis neuroendocrine processes in veterans (Q45328600) (← links)
- A Comparison of Masculinity Facial Preference Among Naturally Cycling, Pregnant, Lactating, and Post-Menopausal Women. (Q48126548) (← links)
- Sociosexuality moderates the association between testosterone and relationship status in men and women (Q48131994) (← links)
- The endocrinology of human caregiving and its intergenerational transmission (Q50135033) (← links)
- Testosterone and romance: the association of testosterone with relationship commitment and satisfaction in heterosexual men and women (Q50626293) (← links)
- The Gendered Family Process Model: An Integrative Framework of Gender in the Family. (Q52352114) (← links)
- Endogenous testosterone and exogenous oxytocin influence the response to baby schema in the female brain. (Q55281569) (← links)
- Testosterone levels and their associations with lifetime number of opposite sex partners and remarriage in a large sample of American elderly men and women (Q60546948) (← links)
- Baby cries and nurturance affect testosterone in men (Q82041048) (← links)
- Diurnal testosterone variability is differentially associated with parenting quality in mothers and fathers (Q87239366) (← links)
- The Influence of Endogenous Opioids on the Relationship between Testosterone and Romantic Bonding (Q90294445) (← links)
- Experimental empathy induction promotes oxytocin increases and testosterone decreases (Q90953759) (← links)
- Human reproductive behavior, life history, and the Challenge Hypothesis: A 30-year review, retrospective and future directions (Q91992695) (← links)
- Hormones in speed-dating: The role of testosterone and cortisol in attraction (Q92204550) (← links)
- Mothers' and fathers' joint profiles for testosterone and oxytocin in a small-scale fishing-farming community: Variation based on marital conflict and paternal contributions (Q92442259) (← links)
- Mothers are sensitive to men's beards as a potential cue of paternal investment (Q93056425) (← links)
- Longitudinal associations between prenatal testosterone and postpartum outcomes in a sample of first-time expectant lesbian couples (Q96770768) (← links)