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1. Does Psychosocial Stress Impact Cognitive Reappraisal? Behavioral and Neural Evidence.

2. Hormonal underpinnings of status conflict: Testosterone and cortisol are related to decisions and satisfaction in the hawk-dove game.

3. Hierarchy stability moderates the effect of status on stress and performance in humans.

4. Exogenous testosterone in women enhances and inhibits competitive decision-making depending on victory–defeat experience and trait dominance.

5. Dual-Hormone Changes Are Related to Bargaining Performance.

6. Testosterone and cortisol jointly modulate risk-taking.

7. Losing the battle but winning the war: Uncertain outcomes reverse the usual effect of winning on testosterone.

8. Testosterone Inhibits Trust but Promotes Reciprocity.

9. Endogenous testosterone and cortisol jointly influence reactive aggression in women

10. Testosterone and cortisol jointly regulate dominance: Evidence for a dual-hormone hypothesis

11. Neural Mechanisms of the Testosterone-Aggression Relation: The Role of Orbitofrontal Cortex.

12. When are low testosterone levels advantageous? The moderating role of individual versus intergroup competition

13. Bridging human and animal research: A comparative approach to studies of personality and health

14. The Social Endocrinology of Dominance: Basal Testosterone Predicts Cortisol Changes and Behavior Following Victory and Defeat.

15. Testosterone change after losing predicts the decision to compete again

16. Importance of considering testosterone-cortisol interactions in predicting human aggression and dominance.

17. 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.

19. The impact of testosterone administration on trust, risk, betrayal, and reciprocity.

20. Paying attention to emotions pays off: emotion regulation training improves financial decision- making.

21. Hormone-Diversity Fit: Collective Testosterone Moderates the Effect of Diversity on Group Performance.

22. Collective hormonal profiles predict group performance.

23. Social network centrality and hormones: The interaction of testosterone and cortisol.

24. 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.

25. Testosterone, gender identity and gender-stereotyped personality attributes.

26. Weak and Variable Effects of Exogenous Testosterone on Cognitive Reflection Test Performance in Three Experiments: Commentary on Nave, Nadler, Zava, and Camerer (2017).

28. Exogenous testosterone enhances cortisol and affective responses to social-evaluative stress in dominant men.

29. Basal cortisol’s relation to testosterone changes may not be driven by social challenges.

30. Acknowledgments.

31. Preliminary evidence that acute stress moderates basal testosterone's association with retaliatory behavior.

32. A comparison of salivary testosterone measurement using immunoassays and tandem mass spectrometry.

33. Testosterone fluctuations in response to a democratic election predict partisan attitudes toward the elected leader.

34. The Mismatch Effect: When Testosterone and Status Are at Odds.

35. Beyond the challenge hypothesis: The emergence of the dual-hormone hypothesis and recommendations for future research.

36. Unstable correspondence between salivary testosterone measured with enzyme immunoassays and tandem mass spectrometry.

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