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Pranjal Mehta
Pranjal Mehta
Associate Professor of Psychology, University College London
Bestätigte E-Mail-Adresse bei ucl.ac.uk - Startseite
Titel
Zitiert von
Zitiert von
Jahr
Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science
Open Science Collaboration
Science 349 (6251), aac4716, 2015
91412015
Testosterone and cortisol jointly regulate dominance: Evidence for a dual-hormone hypothesis
PH Mehta, RA Josephs
Hormones and behavior 58 (5), 898-906, 2010
6872010
Neural mechanisms of the testosterone–aggression relation: the role of orbitofrontal cortex
PH Mehta, J Beer
Journal of cognitive neuroscience 22 (10), 2357-2368, 2010
4582010
Testosterone change after losing predicts the decision to compete again
PH Mehta, RA Josephs
Hormones and Behavior 50 (5), 684-692, 2006
4132006
The social endocrinology of dominance: Basal testosterone predicts cortisol changes and behavior following victory and defeat.
PH Mehta, AC Jones, RA Josephs
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 94 (6), 1078, 2008
4052008
The mismatch effect: When testosterone and status are at odds.
RA Josephs, JG Sellers, ML Newman, PH Mehta
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology; Journal of Personality and …, 2006
3872006
Testosterone inhibits trust but promotes reciprocity
MAS Boksem, PH Mehta, B Van den Bergh, V Van Son, ST Trautmann, ...
Psychological science 24 (11), 2306-2314, 2013
2252013
The dual-hormone hypothesis: a brief review and future research agenda
PH Mehta, S Prasad
Current opinion in behavioral sciences 3, 163-168, 2015
2242015
Testosterone and cortisol jointly modulate risk-taking
PH Mehta, KM Welker, S Zilioli, JM Carré
Psychoneuroendocrinology 56, 88-99, 2015
2222015
Endogenous testosterone and cortisol jointly influence reactive aggression in women
TF Denson, PH Mehta, DH Tan
Psychoneuroendocrinology 38 (3), 416-424, 2013
1862013
Testosterone biases the amygdala toward social threat approach
S Radke, I Volman, P Mehta, V van Son, D Enter, A Sanfey, I Toni, ...
Science advances 1 (5), e1400074, 2015
1192015
Testosterone and self-reported dominance interact to influence human mating behavior
RB Slatcher, PH Mehta, RA Josephs
Social Psychological and Personality Science 2 (5), 531-539, 2011
1162011
Hierarchy stability moderates the effect of status on stress and performance in humans
EL Knight, PH Mehta
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114 (1), 78-83, 2017
1102017
A comparison of salivary testosterone measurement using immunoassays and tandem mass spectrometry
KM Welker, B Lassetter, CM Brandes, S Prasad, DR Koop, PH Mehta
Psychoneuroendocrinology 71, 180-188, 2016
1082016
Importance of considering testosterone–cortisol interactions in predicting human aggression and dominance
JM Carré, PH Mehta
Aggressive Behavior, 2011
1072011
Social endocrinology
PH Mehta, RA Josephs
Social motivation, 171-189, 2011
1062011
When are low testosterone levels advantageous? The moderating role of individual versus intergroup competition
PH Mehta, EV Wuehrmann, RA Josephs
Hormones and behavior 56 (1), 158-162, 2009
1002009
Bridging human and animal research: A comparative approach to studies of personality and health
PH Mehta, SD Gosling
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity 22 (5), 651-661, 2008
792008
Social neuroendocrinology of status: A review and future directions
LD Hamilton, JM Carré, PH Mehta, N Olmstead, JD Whitaker
Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology 1, 202-230, 2015
742015
Exogenous testosterone in women enhances and inhibits competitive decision-making depending on victory–defeat experience and trait dominance
PH Mehta, V van Son, KM Welker, S Prasad, AG Sanfey, A Smidts, ...
Psychoneuroendocrinology 60, 224-236, 2015
662015
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