The authors of the original challenge hypothesis proposed influential hypotheses concerning the relationship between testosterone concentrations in the blood and aggressive social behaviors. Many of the key observations were made… Click to show full abstract
The authors of the original challenge hypothesis proposed influential hypotheses concerning the relationship between testosterone concentrations in the blood and aggressive social behaviors. Many of the key observations were made in avian species studied in the wild and in captivity. In this review we evaluate some remaining questions about the ideas discussed in the challenge hypothesis from a neuroendocrine perspective. For example, a rise in testosterone in response to a social aggressive stimulus might involve complex social information being processed by the brain and an appropriate signal sent to the gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuronal system. Alternatively, social stimuli could more directly stimulate the testis and testosterone release via sympathetic innervation of the testis though such pathways have not been linked to a response to social behaviors. The social behavior decision network in the brain seems to play a key role in the regulation of aggressive behavior but how sensory information concerning aggressive behaviors is interpreted appropriately, processed by the social decision network and sent to the GnRH system is still not well understood. There are continuing questions about the extensive species variation in whether an increase in testosterone occurs in response to a territorial challenge, what its function might be and whether increases in testosterone are necessary to activate morphological changes, or the expression of sexual and aggressive behaviors associated with successful reproduction.
               
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