Stressed Men Take More RisksStressed men take more risks, while stressed women play it safe, according to research published in the Journal PLoS One this week.
Then they did the same test again with a group of volunteers under stress. They stressed them out by making them hold their hands in ice cold water, and measured the levels of the stress hormone cortisol so they were certain this was a stressful situation. Under stress, men take more risks and women are more risk averse, even though they take similar risks when not stressed. Women inflated the balloon an average of 32 times, over 30% less than men, who pumped an average of 48 times. This may correlate to risky behaviours in the real world, such as gambling, smoking, unsafe sex and illegal drug use. So why should this be? "Evolutionarily speaking, it's perhaps more beneficial for men to be aggressive in stressful, high-arousal situations when risk and reward are involved," said Dr Lighthall. "Applied to financial risk taking, it's akin to competition for territory or other valuable resources." So men may have evolved to respond to stress with a flight or flight response – taking bigger risks, while women evolved a more conservative response, which could be beneficial as taking risks in pursuit of resources could “endanger the lives of dependent offspring.” 5th Jul 2009 |
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