PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Amanda C Hahn AU - Lisa M DeBruine AU - Lola A Pesce AU - Andrew Diaz AU - Christopher L Aberson AU - Benedict C Jones TI - Does women’s interpersonal anxiety track changes in steroid hormone levels? AID - 10.1101/456319 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 456319 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/06/02/456319.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/06/02/456319.full AB - Findings for progesterone and anxiety in non-human animals led to the hypothesis that women’s interpersonal anxiety will track changes in progesterone during the menstrual cycle. There have been few direct tests of this hypothesis, however. Consequently, we used a longitudinal design to investigate whether interpersonal anxiety (assessed using the anxious jealousy subscale of the relationship jealousy questionnaire) tracked changes in salivary steroid hormones during the menstrual cycle in a large sample of young adult women (N=383). We found no evidence for within-subject effects of progesterone, estradiol, their interaction or ratio, testosterone, or cortisol on anxious jealousy. There was some evidence that other components of jealousy (e.g., reactive jealousy) tracked changes in women’s cortisol, however. Collectively, these results provide no evidence for the hypothesis that interpersonal anxiety tracks changes in progesterone during the menstrual cycle.