December 22, 2007: Monkeys behaving badly. The Telegraph, U.K.
January 5, 2008: It’s a jungle out there …. The New Scientist, U.K.
January 10, 2008: Law of jungle applies to office politics. The Telegraph, U.K.
January 11, 2008: Sopravvivere in ufficio come nella giungla. Il Corriere della Sera, Italy
January 22, 2008: Political animals (yes, animals). The New York Times
February 21, 2008: Popular science: Two University of Chicago professors shed some light on
the animal in all of us. Chicago Weekly
March 12, 2008: Monkey motherese: female macaques go bananas for babies. Babble
April 1, 2008: The origin of fools. MSNBC
April 5, 2008: E anche dal dentista si paga in natura. La Stampa, Italy
April 24, 2008: Science of love. Chicago Tribune Red Eye
September 21, 2008: El cerebro humano se desarrolló gracias a la presión social. Tendencias
Cientificas, Spain
October 17, 2008: Why humans are so quick to take offense and what that means for the
presidential campaign. Slate Magazine
November 5, 2008: The human brain developed due to the social pressure. CubaNow.net. Cuba
February 10, 2009: What’s the attraction? Look to society, biology, not “logic”. USA Today
March 11, 2009: Public tantrums defeat monkey moms too. Science News
March 11, 2009: Lesson to monkey mothers: don’t ignore tantrums. Science
March 13, 2009: When baby monkeys throw public temper tantrums, moms often give in.
Discover Magazine
May 17, 2009: Minding the animals: ethology and the obsolescence of left humanism. American
Chronicle
June 5, 2009: Elevators make monkeys of us. New York Times – Freakonomics Blog
July/August 2009: An architectural tour of the mind. The APS Observer
August 24, 2009: Testosterone makes a difference in financial risk taking, study of MBA students finds. The Chronicle of Higher Education
August 24, 2009: Testosterone influences women’s career moves. US News & World Report
August 24, 2009: Testosterone-charged women take more financial and career risks. Bloomberg News
August 24, 2009: High testosterone boosts women traders. Reuters
August 24, 2009: Was the financial crisis caused by hormones? Wall Street Journal
August 24, 2009: Women with high testosterone take financial risks. National Geographic
August 24, 2009: Women’s testosterone levels may affect finances. MSNBC
August 24, 2009: Women with high testosterone take more money risks. USA Today
August 24, 2009: Women with high testosterone take more money risks. NPR
August 24, 2009: Women with high testosterone take more money risks. CBS News
August 24, 2009: Study finds women with higher levels of testosterone more likely to take financial risks. Los Angeles Times (Associated Press)
August 24, 2009: Study finds women with higher levels of testosterone more likely to take financial risks. Chicago Tribune (Associated Press)
August 25, 2009: Women with an appetite for risk may also be hungry for sex. Daily Mail
August 25, 2009: Testosterone may guide women’s careers. ABC News
August 25, 2009: Women with high levels of testosterone take riskier jobs. The Telegraph, UK
August 25, 2009: Ruthless women have extra testosterone, scientists show. The Independent, UK
August 25, 2009: Fourth finger may show if you have what it takes. Bloomberg News
August 25, 2009: Can hormones explain female high fliers? BBC World News
August 25, 2009: Testosterone holds the key to financial risk. Financial Times
August 25, 2009: “Traders’ testosterone” fuels female financial flutters. Nature
August 25, 2009: Risky business and testosterone. Forbes
August 25, 2009: High levels of testosterone in women linked to choice of risky careers. ScienceDaily
August 25, 2009: “T” factor: why some women go for risky finance. Calcutta Telegraph, India
August 25, 2009: Male hormone draws women to finance. Ansa, Italy
August 25, 2009: Piu’ sesso e amore del gioco d’azzardo per le donne col testosterone alto. Corriere della Sera, Italy
August 26, 2009: Elogio della donna “senza palle”. Il Giornale, Italy
August 26, 2009: Risky business: women, testosterone, and finance. The Economist
August 28, 2009: Testosterone role in investment decisions. US News & World Report
September 28, 2009: Rats learn to be once bitten, twice shy. The New Scientist
October 5, 2009: Want less risk? Hire more women! The Huffington Post
October 8, 2009: Monkey moms and babies communicate from the start. US News & World Report
Nov./December 2009: Risky business. The University of Chicago Magazine
December 2009: The science of success. The Atlantic Monthly
December 2, 2009: All’universita’ trionfa la legge dei macachi. La Stampa, Italy
January 2010: Our inner monkey: Biologist Dario Maestripieri studies the differences that
separate man from man, monkey from monkey. The University of Chicago Magazine
January 28, 2010: The ape that never grows up. Science
August 17, 2010: Marriage and committed romance reduce stress-related hormone production.
Science Daily
August 18, 2010: Relationships are good for your health. The Telegraph, U.K.
August 20, 2010: Investigation leaves field in the dark about a colleague’s work. Science
August 23, 2010: Spouses can be stress vaccines. Psychology Today
August 28, 2010: Marriage reduces stress-related hormone production. The Philadelphia Bulletin
September 10, 2010: Something for the weekend. Financial Times
September 23, 2010: Need a lift? Bloomberg Businessweek
October 6, 2010: Take a lift and reveal your character. Economic Times
October 21, 2010: Coffee kinesiology. Bloomberg Businessweek
November 11, 2010: Like marriage, committed relationships may protect against stress. USA
Today
November 22, 2010: A primatologist discovers the social factors responsible for maternal
infanticide. Scientific American Blog
November 23, 2010: Why do moms kill their kids? Wired Magazine
March 21, 2011: Low testosterone linked with financial risk-taking. New Scientist
April 5, 2011: Booty call: how monkeys spot a fertile mate. MSNBC
April 7, 2011: For rhesus macaques, to know her may mean to love her. The New York Times
April 25, 2011: Science publishes replication of 2007 Hauser study. Science
May 18, 2011: Men relax best when wives are busy. USA Today
October 11, 2011: Abused chicks grow up to be abusers. Science
February 22, 2012: Women are attracted to men with healthy faces. Cosmos Magazine
February 26, 2012: Liberate your inner scientist. Arizona Daily Star
April 1, 2012: Evolving thinking: Studies of primates and robotic fish offer clues about how life
developed and why we behave as we do. Boston Globe
April 1, 2012: Yes, it is a jungle out there: email and gorilla warfare. Chicago Tribune
April 7, 2012: Can primates shed light on the roots of romance? New Scientist
April 10, 2012: Monkey genetics track social status. Nature
April 14, 2012: Gorillas made me do it. Salon.com
April 20, 2012: Now you know why your boss is such an ape. Wall Street Journal
April 2012: Book review of Games Primates Play. Psychology Today
April 2012: Book review of Games Primates Play. Nature
May 2012: Book review of Games Primates Play. Discover Magazine
May 5, 2012: Book review of Games Primates Play. Science News
June 2012: Blogger Spotlight: Strangers need not apply. Psychology Today
July 3, 2012: Discover your inner baboon. Daily Mail, U.K.
September 12, 2012: It ain’t necessarily so: How much do evolutionary stories reveal about
the mind? The New Yorker
September 14, 2012: Book review of Games Primates Play. Science
October 8, 2012: Uncomfortable truth: why it pays to look good at work. Sydney Morning
Herald, Australia
October 12, 2012: Dr. Strangelaugh. Wall Street Journal
January 13, 2013: Attenti al macaco che e’ in noi. Corriere della Sera, Italy
February 14, 2013: Relationship health benefits. The Huffington Post
February 28, 2014: Gelose, servili e “mafiose”: che umane quelle scimmie. Il Giornale, Italy
March 1, 2014: I macachi sono nepotistici e pagano il pizzo ai clan. Chi ci ricordano? La
Repubblica, Italy
April 1, 2014: Night owls, unlike early birds, tend to be unmarried risk-takers. Science Daily
April 2, 2014: La vita notturna induce a rischiare. La Stampa, Italy
April 2, 2014: To sleep or to sleep with? Study shows night-owl women have more sex, fewer
relationships. Time Magazine
April 3, 2014: Night owls more likely to be single and have more sex: can bedtimes predict sex
frequency? Medical Daily
April 4, 2014: Stay up late? You are more likely to be single, study suggests. The Huffington Post
May 31, 2014: Study: women night owls more likely to take risks and be single. Chicago
Tribune
June 20, 2014: An appetite for risk is rooted in biology. The Columbian
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