6 found
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  1.  17
    Mating behavior: Moves of mind or molecules?Helmuth Nyborg & Charlotte Boeggild - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (1):29-30.
  2.  12
    Individual differences or different individuals? That is the question.Helmuth Nyborg - 1987 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10 (1):34-35.
  3.  17
    Mathematics, sex hormones, and brain function.Helmuth Nyborg - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (2):206-207.
  4.  20
    Good, bad, and ugly questions about heredity.Helmuth Nyborg - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (1):142-143.
  5.  33
    Intelligence, hormones, sex, brain size, and biochemistry: It all needs to have equal causal standing before integration is possible.Helmuth Nyborg - 2007 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (2):164-165.
    Recent brain imaging points to differences in brain structure that relate to intelligence, but how do we model their causal relationship within a coherent framework that circumvents classic dualist traps? A bottom-level nonlinear, dynamic, multifactor, multiplicative, multidimensional, molecular (ND4M) trait-covariance time-space model may accomplish this better than traditional approaches.
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  6.  24
    Multivariate modelling of testosterone-dominance associations.Helmuth Nyborg - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (1):155-159.
    Mazur & Booth (1998) (M&B) suggested that high testosterone (T) relates to status, dominance, and (anti-) social behaviour. However, low T also relates to status and to formal dominance. The General Trait Covariance (GTC) model predicts both relations under the assumption that high and low T modulates the genotype in ways that enforce the development of almost polar covariant patterns of body, brain, intellectual, and personality traits, irrespective of race. The precise modelling of these dose-dependent molecular body-intelligence-personality-behaviour relations requires that (...)
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