Saturday, July 10, 2010

Pattern of money allocation in experimental games supports the stress hypothesis of gender differences in Toxoplasma gondii-induced behavioural change

Folia Parasitol (Praha). 2010 Jun;57(2):136-42.

Pattern of money allocation in experimental games supports the stress hypothesis of gender differences in Toxoplasma gondii-induced behavioural changes

Lindová J, Kubena AA, Sturcová H, Krivohlavá R, Novotná M, Rubesová A, Havlícek J, Kodym P, Flegr J.

Department of Philosophy and History of Science, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Vinicná 7, 128 44 Prague, Czech Republic. jit.hanusova@centrum.cz

Abstract
Latent toxoplasmosis has been previously found to cause behavioural and personality changes in humans, which are specific for each gender. Here we tested the stress hypothesis of these gender differences based on the assumption that latent toxoplasmosis causes long-term subliminal stress. In line with this hypothesis, the gender difference will appear specifically in situations with interpersonal context because in contrast to the typical individualistic coping style of men, women have a tendency to express elevated prosocial behaviour under stress. Altogether 295 biology students (29/191 females and 27/104 males infected by T. gondii) played a modified version of the Dictator Game and the Trust Game. As predicted, a gender difference in the effect of latent toxoplasmosis was found for the measure of reciprocal altruism in the Trust Game (p = 0.016), but both genders appeared less generous when infected in the Dictator Game modified to minimize social connotation (p = 0.048).

PMID: 20608476 [PubMed - in process]

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