Mazur & Booth: Testosterone and dominance
Open Peer Commentary
Testosterone's role in dominance, sex, and aggression: Why so controversial?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 June 1998, pp. 379-380
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Testosterone-aggression relationship: An exemplar of interactionism
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 380-381
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Aggressiveness and dominance
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 381-382
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Placebo-controlled manipulations of testosterone levels and dominance
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 382-383
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Of fish and men: A comparative approach to androgens and social dominance
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 383-384
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The nurture of nature: Social, developmental, and environmental controls of aggression
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 384-385
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Honour subcultures and the reciprocal model
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 385-386
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Dominance, sexual activity, and sexual emotions
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- 01 June 1998, p. 386
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Booth & Mazur: Testosterone and dominance
Authors' Response
Old issues and new perspectives on testosterone research
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 386-390
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Research Article
Innate talents: Reality or myth?
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 399-407
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Howe et al.: Innate talents
Open Peer Commentary
Testing the limits of the ontogenetic sources of talent and excellence
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 407-408
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Superiority on the Embedded Figures Test in autism and in normal males: Evidence of an “innate talent”?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 June 1998, pp. 408-409
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Could the answer be talent?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 June 1998, pp. 409-410
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Explaining exceptional performance: Constituent abilities and touchstone phenomena
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 410-411
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Fruitless polarities
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- 01 June 1998, p. 411
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Absurd environmentalism
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 411-412
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Achievement: The importance of industriousness
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 412-413
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Basic capacities can be modified or circumvented by deliberate practice: A rejection of talent accounts of expert performance
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- 01 June 1998, pp. 413-414
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Natural talents: An argument for the extremes
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 June 1998, p. 414
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Inborn talent exists
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- 01 June 1998, p. 415
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