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Correction: Testing strategic pluralism: The roles of attractiveness and competitive abilities to understand conditionality in men’s short-term reproductive strategies

2021 , FIGUEROA VALDEBENITO, ORIANA CRISTINA , MUÑOZ REYES, JOSÉ ANTONIO , RODRÍGUEZ SICKERT, CARLOS ANDRÉS , Nohelia Valenzuela , Paula Pavez , Oriana Ramírez-Herrera , Miguel Pita , David Diaz , Ana Belén Fernández-Martínez , POLO RODRIGO, PABLO

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Evidence of the active participation of women in the intergroup conflict based on the use of aggression and cooperation

2023 , MUÑOZ REYES, JOSÉ ANTONIO , Daniel Torrico-Bazoberry , POLO RODRIGO, PABLO , Eugenio Guzmán-Lavín , FIGUEROA VALDEBENITO, ORIANA CRISTINA , FAJARDO RODRÍGUEZ, GABRIELA PAZ , Nohelia Valenzuela , BELINCHÓN, MONTSERRAT , RODRÍGUEZ SICKERT, CARLOS ANDRÉS , Miguel Pita

AbstractIntergroup conflict has been a persistent aspect of human societies since the emergence of our species. Various researchers have proposed that competition between groups has acted as a key selective force throughout human evolutionary history. Such intergroup competition for limited resources exacerbated the expression of intergroup aggression and intragroup cooperation. Furthermore, it would have a sexual dimorphism, with men demonstrating increased sensitivity to conflict threats—in order to maximize reproductive opportunities—, while women generally reject from active engagement in intergroup conflict. In the present study, we conducted behavioral experiments under controlled laboratory conditions to measure cooperation and aggression from using virtual games, specifically the Public Good Games and the Point Subtraction Aggression Paradigm, in a sample of 541 participants. We created control and experimental intergroup competition scenarios, where aggression and cooperation were necessary to increase monetary rewards. Our results shows that men modulate aggression and cooperation in the presence of intergroup conflict. In addition, our data also reveals that women cooperate more than men and display heightened levels of cooperation and aggression when confronted with intergroup conflict. These findings prompt a reevaluation of current functional theoretical models concerning the role of women in intergroup conflict and suggest that the dynamics of human aggression and cooperation may be more nuanced than previously believed.

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The role of exogenous testosterone and social environment on the expression of sociosexuality and status-seeking behaviors in young Chilean men

2024 , POLO RODRIGO, PABLO , FAJARDO RODRÍGUEZ, GABRIELA PAZ , MUÑOZ REYES, JOSÉ ANTONIO , VALENZUELA MARTÍNEZ, NOHELIA , BELINCHÓN, MONTSERRAT , FIGUEROA VALDEBENITO, ORIANA CRISTINA , Ana Fernández-Martínez , Marcel Deglín , Miguel Pita

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Testing strategic pluralism: The roles of attractiveness and competitive abilities to understand conditionality in men’s short-term reproductive strategies

2020 , FIGUEROA VALDEBENITO, ORIANA CRISTINA , MUÑOZ REYES, JOSÉ ANTONIO , RODRÍGUEZ SICKERT, CARLOS ANDRÉS , Nohelia Valenzuela , Paula Pavez , Oriana Ramírez-Herrera , Miguel Pita , David Diaz , Ana Belén Fernández-Martínez , POLO RODRIGO, PABLO , Alex Jones