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Basal and dynamic relationships between implicit power motivation and estradiol in women
Institution:1. Douglas College, Canada;2. Western Sydney University, Australia;1. Polish Academy of Science Unit of Anthropology in Wroclaw, Podwale 75, 50-449 Wroclaw, Poland;2. Yale University Department of Anthropology, 10 Sachem Street, New Haven, 06511 CA, USA;3. University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Interdisciplinary Center for Applied Cognitive Studies, Chodakowska 19/31, 03-815 Warsaw, Poland;4. University of Wroclaw Department of Human Biology, Kuznicza 35, 50-138 Wroclaw, Poland
Abstract:This study investigated basal and reciprocal relationships between implicit power motivation (n Power), a preference for having impact and dominance over others, and both salivary estradiol and testosterone in women. 49 participants completed the Picture Story Exercise, a measure of n Power. During a laboratory contest, participants competed in pairs on a cognitive task and contest outcome (win vs. loss) was experimentally varied. Estradiol and testosterone levels were determined in saliva samples collected at baseline and several times post-contest, including 1 day post-contest. n Power was positively associated with basal estradiol concentrations. The positive correlation between n Power and basal estradiol was stronger in single women, women not taking oral contraceptives, or in women with low-CV estradiol samples than in the overall sample of women. Women's estradiol responses to a dominance contest were influenced by the interaction of n Power and contest outcome: estradiol increased in power-motivated winners but decreased in power-motivated losers. For power-motivated winners, elevated levels of estradiol were still present the day after the contest. Lastly, n Power and estradiol did not correlate with self-reported dominance and correlated negatively with self-reported aggression. Self-reported dominance and aggression did not predict estradiol changes as a function of contest outcome. Overall, n Power did not predict basal testosterone levels or testosterone changes as a function of dominance contest outcome.
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