Join Amazon Prime and ship Two-Day for free and Overnight for $3.99. Already a member? Sign in.

 

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
   
Endocrinology of Social Relationships
  
Please tell the publisher:
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.
 
  

Endocrinology of Social Relationships (Hardcover)

by Phyllis C. Lee (Contributor), Kim Wallen (Contributor), John C. Wingfield (Contributor), Ericka Boone (Contributor), Angela J. Grippo (Contributor), Michael Ruscio (Contributor), C. Sue Carter (Contributor), Karen L. Bales (Contributor), Toni E. Ziegler (Contributor), Charles Snowdon (Contributor), Lynn A. Fairbanks (Contributor), Melissa Emery Thompson (Contributor), Carole K. Hooven (Contributor), James R. Roney (Contributor), Benjamin C. Campbell (Contributor), Peter T. Ellison (Editor), Peter B. Gray (Editor)

List Price: $49.95
Price: $44.54 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
You Save: $5.41 (11%)
Pre-order Price Guarantee. Learn more.
This title has not yet been released.
You may pre-order it now and we will deliver it to you when it arrives.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.


Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Pre-order Price Guarantee! Order now and if the Amazon.com price decreases between your order time and the end of the day of the release date, you'll receive the lowest price. Here's how (restrictions apply)

Editorial Reviews

Review
The first volume to pull together the emerging field of human behavioral endocrinology as the product of a long evolutionary history exerting subtle influences throughout modern societies. The distinguished and authoritative assemblage of authors share their enthusiasm and leave no doubt that this will be an influential scientific discipline in the years to come.
--Katherine E. Wynne-Edwards, University of Calgary Faculty of Veterinary Medicine

Product Description

In social relationships—whether between mates, parents and offspring, or friends—we find much of life’s meaning. But in these relationships, so critical to our well-being, might we also detect the workings, even directives, of biology? This book, a rare melding of human and animal research and theoretical and empirical science, ventures into the most interesting realms of behavioral biology to examine the intimate role of endocrinology in social relationships.

The importance of hormones to reproductive behavior—from breeding cycles to male sexual display—is well known. What this book considers is the increasing evidence that hormones are just as important to social behavior. Peter Ellison and Peter Gray include the latest findings—both practical and theoretical—on the hormonal component of both casual interactions and fundamental bonds. The contributors, senior scholars and rising scientists whose work is shaping the field, go beyond the proximate mechanics of neuroendocrine physiology to integrate behavioral endocrinology with areas such as reproductive ecology and life history theory. Ranging broadly across taxa, from birds and rodents to primates, the volume pays particular attention to human endocrinology and social relationships, a focus largely missing from most works of behavioral endocrinology.



See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details