Friday, May 23, 2025

No Evidence of Effects of Testosterone on Economic Preferences

From Tyler Cowen.

"There is conflicting evidence on whether testosterone affects economic preferences such as risk taking, fairness and altruism, with the evidence suggesting significant effects coming from correlational studies or small underpowered testosterone administration studies. To credibly test this hypothesis, we conducted a large pre-registered double-blind randomized controlled trial with = 1,000 male participants; 10–20 times larger than most previous randomized controlled studies. Participants were randomly allocated to receive a single dose of either placebo or intranasal testosterone. They thereafter carried out a series of economic tasks capturing social preferences, competitiveness and risk preferences. We fail to find any evidence of a treatment effect for any of our nine primary outcome measures, thereby failing to conceptually replicate several previous studies reporting positive findings that used smaller sample sizes. In line with these results, we furthermore find no evidence of an association between basal testosterone and economic preferences, failing to also conceptually replicate previous correlational studies.

By Anna Dreber, et.al."

Related posts:

Can Testosterone Help Women Earn More Money? (2009)  

Male sex hormone may affect stock trades (2009)

Women Make Trade-offs When Looking For A Man (2010)

Are Women Better At Investing Than Men? (2010)

What Do Wall Street Traders Need Just The Right Amount Of? (2012)

The Myth Of The Ring Of Gyges And Insider Trading By Congressional Staffers (2010)

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