London - Testosterone drives egocentricism at the cost of cooperating with others, consequently affecting group decisions, a study reveals.
Collective problem solving can provide benefits over individual decisions as we are able to share our information and experiences, said a new study from Wellcome Trust's Centre for Neuroimaging at the University College London.
Now researchers have shown that the testosterone has the opposite effect -- it makes people act less cooperative and more egocentric, the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B reported.
Researcher Nick Wright and colleagues at the Centre for Neuroimaging carried out a series of tests using 17 pairs of female volunteers who had previously never met. The test took place over two days, spaced a week apart, a university statement said.
"When we are making decisions in groups, we tread a fine line between cooperation and self-interest: too much cooperation and we may never get our way, but if we are too self-orientated, we are likely to ignore people who have real insight," explained Wright.
On one of the days, both volunteers in each pair were given a testosterone supplement; on the other day, they were given a placebo.
Researchers found that as expected, cooperation enabled the group to perform much better than the individuals alone when individuals had received only the placebo. But, when given a testosterone supplement, the benefit of cooperation was markedly reduced.
In fact, higher levels of testosterone were associated with individuals behaving egocentrically and deciding in favour of their own selection over their partner's.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Iran launches satellite (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Pakistan, Indonesia sign Preferential Trade Agreement (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Four die as ambulance falls into canal in Pakistan (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Pakistan to speed up gas import (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Pakistan got Rs.972 bn as taxes in past seven months (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Pakistan government may sink deeper into crisis: daily (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Russian city to slap fine for promoting homosexuality (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
US fiscal trajectory unsustainable, says US official (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
E-prescribing slashes prescription errors (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Over 600 injured as police-protesters clash in Egypt (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Indian-American student triggers Harvard probe (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Putin's poll office to cooperate with election monitors (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Russia to build six submarines annually from 2013 (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Wife indicted in Argentine governor's death (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Iran to increase defence budget (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Brazil cabinet minister quits (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Putin fans launch website to build support (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Pakistani child prodigy's stamp issued (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
'NATO combat operations in Afghanistan to last till 2014' (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
European parliament urges Russia, China to back Iran sanctions (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Iran can produce four atom bombs: Israel (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
PM Gilani has committed contempt, rules court (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Beware drivers! Police watching you mile away (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
Flesh-eating bug spreads in Britain (3rd Feb, 2012) |
 |
NASA films far side of moon (3rd Feb, 2012) |