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TRANSCRIPT: How Testosterone And Culture Shape Behavior: Carole K. Hooven

Read here the full transcript of evolutionary biologist Carole K. Hooven’s talk titled “How Testosterone And Culture Shape Behavior” at TED Talks 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Power of Testosterone

As I look around the room, I can see, I think it’s about half of you have been exposed to high levels of a powerful chemical, and it is circulating in your blood as we speak. It’s flowing freely through almost all of your cells, including neurons, where it affects whether they live or die and how they grow and function. So this one chemical has profound and lasting effects — not just on your body, but also on your brain and behavior.

This is testosterone. Both sexes have it, but men have much more than women, about 15 to 20 times more. And that is what explains why half of you are bigger and hairier than the other half, on average, like all sex differences.

The Science of Behavioral Endocrinology

For the last 20 years, I’ve been teaching about behavioral endocrinology, and this is a field that focuses on how hormones affect behavior and vice versa. I’m particularly drawn to testosterone because it explains so much about why the sexes are different. But this area of science has become deeply entangled in the culture wars. Now, simply saying things that are obvious to most biologists, like that there are two reproductive classes, male and female, can land you in a heap of trouble. I know because I’ve had some personal experience with this.

I also know that for some trans people, their allies and others, this language about the biology of sex can feel painful and that others are trying to weaponize the science. Here I do not have the answers, but I can tell you that my students have really enjoyed learning about this science, partly because it helps them understand more about their own bodies and feelings. They come away with a sense of more compassion for other people who are different from themselves.

Sex Differences in Play

I’m going to be talking about sex differences in play to try to convince you that this science is fascinating, and it can help us all be better off. First, I want to share the results from a joint project I started 15 years ago, in which I grew two small organs that secreted testosterone in my uterus. Those organs were attached to the new human I was growing in there.

Now you can observe the behavior of that human in this video of two boys wrestling each other. It’s from a few years ago, and my son is the one with the short hair. This kind of rough-and-tumble play is more common in boys than girls everywhere in the world.

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When my son was growing inside of me, his tiny little testes were cranking out the testosterone. At that early stage, it has some very big and important jobs to do. It has to masculinize the genitalia, and it has to ensure that everything is set up for sperm to be produced and delivered later on. It is also acting in the brain to motivate later behaviors, like play fighting, that are particularly beneficial to many male mammals.

Chimpanzees and Shared Behavior Patterns

I never gave much thought to testosterone until I spent the better part of a year in western Uganda studying wild chimpanzees. As I watched them living their lives — eating, playing, sleeping, fighting, having sex — I was really struck by our shared patterns of behavior. Particularly relevant to this talk was the fact that the little males did much more play fighting than the little females.

These connections to us are so striking because we don’t share any culture with chimpanzees. But we do share almost all of our genes and our hormones, including higher levels of testosterone in the males. Another pattern of behavior we share is that relative to females, male chimps spend much more time and energy competing for social dominance. In chimps, this involves lots of fighting and also lots of threats and having a sense about when to challenge other males but also when to submit and when to flee.

The Evolutionary Importance of Play

These males aren’t fighting each other because they know that this is a great way to get more sex with fertile females. But males who behave this way do tend to pass on more of their genes into future generations, and then their sons inherit similar propensities. Simply surviving without passing on one’s genes is an evolutionary dead end. So in addition to survival skills, young animals like chimps also need to learn reproductive skills, and they do that through play. Our ancestors also practiced these skills through play. And that legacy is reflected in our own kids.

Personal Experiences with Play

Now not all boys have any desire to tackle their friends, and they would rather play house or dress up, and they should go for it. There are no hard rules in nature about how the sexes should play. When I was little, I used to wrestle with my three older brothers, and I played Little League baseball. But when I played with my girlfriends, like my best friend Annie, our play just didn’t involve that kind of roughhousing that my son and his friends were into.

Annie and I would do stuff like have tea and run class for our stuffed animals — the smallest of whom lived in a doll house. And for some reason, we loved playing office. We developed a filing system and spent a lot of time filling out forms. Filling out forms from junk mail, which we might have stolen from neighborhood mailboxes.

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The Purpose of Social Play

Am I really trying to tell you that knowing how to set up tea for five or subscribe to “National Geographic” was supposed to make us better moms or whatever? Not exactly. The specifics of play are always influenced by culture, but social play in general helps to develop skills that both sexes need, like how to resolve conflict, how to take turns, and even to figure out just what you can get away with.

But the sex-specialization part, with more nurturing play in girls and more fighting play in boys, did likely evolve because these are skills that each sex needs to learn how to reproduce.

Scientific Evidence on Testosterone and Play

That’s a little evolutionary background.