Similar Articles |
|
Psychology Today Jan/Feb 2007 Sherry Baker |
The Home Team Advantage Testosterone and estrogen drive touchdowns and boost brainpower, but they work their magic with a selectivity that science is only beginning to understand. A primer on how these counterintuitive chemicals truly shape us. |
AskMen.com January 20, 2001 Joshua Levine |
Can Stress Kill You? Today's stress, especially when caused by psychological or emotional factors, can be prolonged and may have damaging effects on your health... |
AskMen.com Jasper Anson |
Stress & Health Stress is meant to protect us, and in small doses it is healthy, but when stress responses become habitual, there can be a problem. Read on for tips on how to deal with stress when it gets the better of you. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 5, 2015 Carmen Nobel |
How Hormones Foretell Whether People Will Cheat There's a key link between our hormone levels and unethical behavior, according to new research by Francesca Gino, and colleagues. The good news: businesses can do something about it. |
AskMen.com Dave Golokhov |
Fatherhood And Testosterone "Men who become fathers have far lower levels of the male hormone than when they were single and childless." |
AskMen.com James Fell |
Exercise And Anxiety Exercise does a good job of dealing with the harmful effects of chronic stress, and a 2006 study agrees, saying the more exercise, the better, especially when it comes to reducing blood pressure. |
Investment Advisor November 2007 Olivia Mellan |
Stressing for Success Tension, pressure, and pain -- just another day in the life of an advisor, however, the better you get at managing your own stress, the better you'll be able to help your clients when life throws them for a loop. |
AskMen.com Kathleen Blanchard |
Health And Marriage: Benefits For Men If you find the prospect of "tying the knot" stressful, you may want to consider very real evidence that married or partnered men are healthier and live longer than their single counterparts. |
Science News April 11, 2009 Sid Perkins |
Made For Each Other: The Biology Of The Human-Animal Bond This book by Meg Daley Olmert explores how urban dwellers become increasingly disconnected from nature and animals. |
Chemistry World February 2006 Michael Gross |
Cupid's Chemistry Scientists are beginning to make some sense of romantic love through modern imaging techniques and a multidisciplinary approach involving geneticists, biochemists, anthropologists, psychologists, and others. |
Fast Company July 2010 Adam L. Penenberg |
Social Networking Affects Brains Like Falling in Love Neuroeconomist Paul Zak has discovered, for the first time, that social networking triggers the release of the generosity-trust chemical in our brains. And that should be a wake-up call for every company. |
AskMen.com October 1, 2015 Christopher Asandra |
Stress Is Killing Your Career A study provided clear evidence that stress inhibits the benefits of the testosterone naturally produced by a man's body. By increasing cortisol levels, the study found, stress limits a man's leadership potential. |
CIO August 1, 2003 Christopher Koch |
Personal Management Are you putting on a little weight? Do you think no one understands you? Do you feel out of control? Of course you do. Why should you be different from any other CIO? Here's why you need to stop, take a look around and change your ways. |
Salon.com July 10, 2002 Trisha Posner |
Death by hormones It's been more than 50 years since studies first sounded the alarm about hormone replacement therapy. Women, silenced by shame, have been guinea pigs of the pharmaceutical industry for too long. |
AskMen.com Dave Golokhov |
Men And Stress Everyone has a different way of dealing with stress, and a new study suggests it has more to do with your gender than your individuality. |
Health August 24, 2009 Catherine Guthrie |
The Latest on Hormone Therapy for Women It's not often that a middle-aged former sitcom star is at the center of an important health debate. But Suzanne Somers's hormone therapy -- has put her in the limelight. |
Wired July 2005 Annalee Newitz |
The Coming Boom Big Pharma has made billions pumping up the male population. Now neuroscientists are reverse engineering the female orgasm. For women, excitement starts in the brain. |
AskMen.com December 15, 2015 Patrick Owen |
Acute vs Chronic Stress Use science to help you beat stress at its own game. |
Psychology Today Jul/Aug 2007 A.J.S. Rayl |
The High Price of a Broken Heart The heart is the honorary seat of emotion -- and no wonder. Experience, mood, temperament, and thought style can profoundly alter the ticker. Dispatches from the hidden superhighway between heart and mind. |
Health April 19, 2010 Kate Stinchfield |
The Really Good News About Stress Here's how to use stress without letting it use you. |
American Journal of Nursing June 2011 Karen Roush |
Menopausal Hormone Therapy: What We Know Now This article describes the findings and limitations of the major research thus far on hormone therapy. |