Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/111471
Title: Testosterone administration increases the computational impact of social evaluation on the updating of state self-esteem
Authors: Long, J 
Lu, J
Hu, Y
Tobler, PN
Wu, Y 
Issue Date: 2025
Source: Biological psychiatry : cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging, Available online 25 February 2025, In Press, Journal Pre-proof, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpsc.2025.02.008
Abstract: Background: High self-esteem promotes well-being and buffers against anxiety. However, state self-esteem (SSE) is not stable but dynamically updated based on evaluations received from others. Particularly in men, decreased SSE are related to aberrant behaviors and clinical symptoms. A critical physiological mechanism underlying these associations could involve a sexual hormone, testosterone. However, the causal relationship between testosterone and the process of updating SSE in men remains unknown.
Methods: The study had a double-blind, placebo-controlled, between-participants design. First, we administered a single dose (150 mg) of testosterone or placebo gel to healthy young men (n = 120). Subsequently, the participants completed a social evaluation task in which they adjusted prediction of potential evaluation by others and dynamically reported their SSE based on the social feedback they received. Meanwhile, we applied a computational modeling approach to investigate the dynamic changes in their SSE.
Results: Exogenous testosterone significantly influenced the participants’ expectation of receiving positive social feedback from raters with different approval rates and separately amplified the changes in average SSE when the participants received positive or negative feedback from the raters. Even more importantly, computational modeling showed that the participants who received testosterone (versus the placebo) assigned a higher weight to expected social feedback and social prediction errors when updating their SSE.
Conclusions: The findings provide potential clinical implications for combining exogenous testosterone with interventions aimed at enhancing SSE through positive social feedback as a pre-clinical treatment for aberrant behaviors and clinical symptoms.
Keywords: Computational modeling
Pre-clinical treatment
Social feedback
Social prediction error
State self-esteem (SSE)
Testosterone
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Journal: Biological psychiatry : cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging 
ISSN: 2451-9022
EISSN: 2451-9030
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2025.02.008
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