Hormones in speed-dating

The role of testosterone and cortisol in attraction

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Leander van der Meij (Eindhoven University of Technology)

Andrew Demetriou (TU Delft - Multimedia Computing)

Marina Tulin (Universiteit van Amsterdam)

Ileana Méndez (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

Peter Dekker (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

Tila Pronk (Tilburg University)

Multimedia Computing
Copyright
© 2019 Leander van der Meij, A.M. Demetriou, Marina Tulin, Ileana Méndez, Peter Dekker, Tila Pronk
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2019.07.003
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 Leander van der Meij, A.M. Demetriou, Marina Tulin, Ileana Méndez, Peter Dekker, Tila Pronk
Multimedia Computing
Volume number
116
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

There is evidence that testosterone and cortisol levels are related to the attraction of a romantic partner; testosterone levels relate to a wide range of sexual behaviors and cortisol is a crucial component in the response to stress. To investigate this, we conducted a speed-dating study among heterosexual singles. We measured salivary testosterone and cortisol changes in men and women (n = 79) when they participated in a romantic condition (meeting opposite-sex others, i.e., potential romantic partners), as well as a control condition (meeting same-sex others, i.e., potential friends). Over the course of the romantic speed-dating event, results showed that women's but not men's testosterone levels increased and cortisol levels decreased for both men and women. These findings indicate that men's testosterone and cortisol levels were elevated in anticipation of the event, whereas for women, this appears to only be the case for cortisol. Concerning the relationship between attraction and hormonal change, four important findings can be distinguished. First, men were more popular when they arrived at the romantic speed-dating event with elevated cortisol levels. Second, in both men and women, a larger change in cortisol levels during romantic speed-dating was related to more selectivity. Third, testosterone alone was unrelated to any romantic speed-dating outcome (selectivity or popularity). However, fourth, women who arrived at the romantic speed-dating event with higher testosterone levels were more selective when their anticipatory cortisol response was low. Overall, our findings suggest that changes in the hormone cortisol may be stronger associated with the attraction of a romantic partner than testosterone.

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