Gender differences in financial risk aversion and career choices are affected by testosterone

Northwestern University · University of Chicago

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Women are generally more risk averse than men. We investigated whether between- and within-gender variation in financial risk aversion was accounted for by variation in salivary concentrations of testosterone and in markers of prenatal testosterone exposure in a sample of >500 MBA students. Higher levels of circulating testosterone were associated with lower risk aversion among women, but not among men. At comparably low concentrations of salivary testosterone, however, the gender difference in risk aversion disappeared, suggesting that testosterone has nonlinear effects on risk aversion regardless of gender. A similar relationship between risk aversion and testosterone was also found using markers of prenatal…

Citation impact

816
total citations
FWCI
39.07
Percentile
100%
References
33
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Testosterone (patch)
  • Risk aversion (psychology)
  • Internal medicine
  • Psychology
  • Endocrinology
  • Medicine
  • Economics
  • Financial economics
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