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Booth, Alan; Johnson, David R.; Granger, Douglas A. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
In a sample of established working- and middle-class families with school-aged children (N= 307 wives and 307 husbands), neither husbands nor wives testosterone showed a direct connection with marital quality. In contrast, the association between husbands' testosterone and positive and negative marital quality (as evaluated by both spouses) was…
Descriptors: Spouses, Social Environment, Marital Satisfaction, Family Role
Hazler, Richard J.; Carney, JoLynn V.; Granger, Douglas A. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2006
The emergence of minimally intrusive techniques for collecting biological data creates a case for the inclusion of these data into bullying research models. This integration would produce a more comprehensive understanding of the problems and better direct intervention and prevention techniques, which are currently based primarily on self-report,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Integration Studies, Intervention, Prevention
Booth, Alan; Granger, Douglas A.; Mazur, Allan; Kivlighan, Katie T. – Social Forces, 2006
Popular perceptions of the effect of testosterone on "manly" behavior are inaccurate. We need to move away from such simplistic notions by treating testosterone as one component along with other physiological, psychological and sociological variables in interactive and reciprocal models of behavior. Several hormones can now be measured in saliva,…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Social Behavior, Social Environment, Social Status