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Women With High Testosterone Levels Choose Risky
Careers
Reported August 25, 2009
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – The battle of the
sexes rages on while researchers explore how the hormone testosterone plays
an important role in financial risk-taking and career choice.
Research has shown that testosterone enhances competitiveness and dominance,
reduces fear, and is associated with risky behaviors like gambling and
alcohol use. Until now, however, the impact of testosterone on gender
differences in financial risk-taking has not been explored.
The new research, "Gender differences in financial risk aversion and career
choices are affected by testosterone," was conducted by Paola Sapienza,
Associate Professor, Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern
University, Luigi Zingales, Robert McCormick Professor, University of
Chicago Booth School of Business, and Dario Maestripieri, Professor in
Comparative Human Development, University of Chicago.
"In general, women are more risk averse than men when it comes to making
important financial decisions, which in turn can affect their career
choices," Sapienza is quoted as saying. "For example, in our sample set, 36
percent of female MBA students chose high-risk financial careers such as
investment banking or trading, compared to 57 percent of male students. We
wanted to explore whether these gender differences are related to
testosterone, which men have, on average, in higher concentrations than
women."
Using an economic-based measure of risk aversion, the researchers found that
higher levels of testosterone were associated with a greater appetite for
risk in women, but not among men. In men and women with similar levels of
testosterone, however, the gender difference in risk aversion disappeared.
Additionally, the researchers reported that the link between risk aversion
and testosterone predicted career choices after graduation. Individuals who
were high in testosterone and low in risk aversion chose riskier careers in
finance.
"This is the first study showing that gender
differences in financial risk aversion have a biological basis, and that
differences in testosterone levels between individuals can affect important
aspects of economic behavior and career decisions," Maestripieri is quoted
as saying. "That the effects of testosterone on risk aversion are strongest
for individuals with low or intermediate levels of this hormone is similar
to what has been shown for the effects of testosterone on spatial
cognition."
To investigate the relationship between testosterone and risk aversion, the
authors measured testosterone levels in saliva samples from approximately
500 MBA students at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. The
uncharacteristically large sample—which was global in demographic scope—was
familiar with financial risk by virtue of their education, and many pursued
financial careers after business school. The participants were relatively
homogeneous in age, cultural and educational background, and socioeconomic
status, thereby minimizing the effects of non-biological variables.
As part of a mandatory MBA course, the students participated in a laboratory
experiment to measure the relationship between risk and hormonal levels.
Over two days in October 2006, the participants played a computer game in
which they answered a series of questions that asked them to choose between
accepting a guaranteed monetary award or choosing a risky lottery with a
higher potential payout. Students had to choose repeatedly between the
lottery and a fixed payment at increasing values. Two saliva samples were
collected, once before the session and once afterward, to measure hormonal
changes over that time period.
As expected, more risk-prone participants chose the lottery more often,
whereas more risk-averse individuals preferred the guaranteed payout.
Overall, men exhibited significantly lower risk aversion than women and had
significantly higher levels of salivary testosterone than women.
"This study has significant implications for how the effects of testosterone
could impact actual risk-taking in financial markets, because many of these
students will go on to become major players in the financial world,"
Zingales is quoted as saying. "Furthermore, it could shed some light on
gender differences in career choices. Future studies should further explore
the mechanisms through which testosterone affects the brain."
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), August 24,
2009 |