Isn't testosterone also an immunosuppressant? It would need to be a pretty big effect to merit the tradeoff.
Maybe. From Sullivan:
For reasons no one seems to understand, testosterone may also be an immune suppressant. High levels of it can correspond, as recent studies have shown, not only with baldness but also with heart disease and a greater susceptibility to infectious diseases. Higher levels of prostate cancer among blacks, some researchers believe, may well be related to blacks' higher testosterone levels. The aggression it can foster and the risks it encourages lead men into situations that often wound or kill them. And higher levels of testosterone-driven promiscuity make men more prone to sexually transmitted diseases. This is one reason that men live shorter lives on average than women. There is something, in other words, tragic about testosterone. It can lead to a certain kind of male glory; it may lead to valor or boldness or impulsive romanticism. But it also presages a uniquely male kind of doom. The cockerel with the brightest comb is often the most attractive and the most testosteroned, but it is also the most vulnerable to parasites. It is as if it has sacrificed quantity of life for intensity of experience, and this trade-off is a deeply male one.
We’ve discussed signaling and status endlessly on LW; I think this is right up our vein: a 2011 review of research on the connections between famous male hormone testosterone and various forms of social interaction and especially social status, Eisenegger et al’s “The role of testosterone in social interaction”. (I grabbed this PDF in the short time Elsevier left full-text available, but only now, with some modafinil-powered spare time, have gotten around to excerpting it for you guys.)
1 Abstract
2 Excerpts
Is testosterone simply aggression promoting (a sort of ‘roid rage’)?
Probably not:
This may come as a surprise:
The null findings may be due to a possible confounding effect of homeostasis, but that wouldn’t cover the null on acute administration:
‘Dominant’ looks like a better perspective than ‘aggressive’:
This interest in dominance leads to mental changes (I am reminded of self-deception):
(The jokes about women and men almost make themselves.)
Not all of these changes are what one would naively expect (see previously about the ‘folk theory’ of testosterone):
I found interesting the material starting page 267, “Neurobiological mechanisms underlying the role of testosterone in social status hierarchies” (due to my own musings about the possible effects of masturbation went that it might be misinterpreted as reproductive ‘success’ which reduces risk-taking or activity in general):
Fear & stress:
Motivation & learning:
Summary of foregoing:
3 References