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'Warrior Gene' Predicts Aggressive Behavior After Provocation
January 21, 2009
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] - Individuals with the so-called "warrior gene" display higher levels of aggression in response to provocation, according to new research co-authored by Rose McDermott, professor of political science at Brown University. In the experiment, which is the first to examine a behavioral measure of aggression in response to provocation, subjects were asked to cause physical pain to an opponent they believed had taken money from them by administering varying amounts of hot sauce. The findings are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In addition to McDermott, the research team included Dustin Tingley of Princeton University, Jonathan Cowden of the University of California-Santa Barbara, Giovanni Frazetto from the London School of Economics, and Dominic Johnson from the University of Edinburgh. Their experiment synthesized work in psychology and behavioral economics. Monoamine oxidase A is an enzyme that breaks down important neurotransmitters in the brain, including dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin. The enzyme is regulated by monoamine oxidase A gene (MAOA). Humans have various forms of the gene, resulting in different levels of enzymatic activity. People with the low-activity form (MAOA-L) produce less of the enzyme, while the high-activity form (MAOA-H) produces more of the enzyme. Several studies have found a correlation between the low-activity form of MAOA and aggression in observational and survey-based studies. Only about a third of people in Western populations have the low-activity form of MAOA. By comparison, low-activity MAOA has been reported to be much more frequent (approaching two-thirds of people) in some populations that had a history of warfare. This led to a controversy over MAOA being dubbed the "warrior gene." The PNAS paper is the first experimental test of whether MAOA-L individuals display higher levels of actual behavioral aggression in response to provocation. A total of 78 subjects took part in the experiment over networked computers (all were male students from the University of California-Santa Barbara). Each subject (A) first performed a vocabulary task in which they earned money. Then they were told that an anonymous partner (B), linked over the network, could choose to take some of their earnings away from them. The original subject (A) could then choose to punish the taker (B) by forcing them to eat unpleasantly hot (spicy) sauce - but they had to pay to do so, so administering punishment was costly. In reality, the "partner" who took money away was a computer, which allowed the researchers to control responses. No one actually ingested hot sauce. Their results demonstrate that * Low-activity MAOA subjects displayed slightly higher levels of aggression overall than high-activity MAOA subjects. * There was strong evidence for a gene-by-environment interaction, such that MAOA is less associated with the occurrence of aggression in the low-provocation condition (when the amount of money taken was low), but significantly predicted aggression in a high-provocation situation (when the amount of money taken was high). The results support previous research suggesting that MAOA influences aggressive behavior, with potentially important implications for interpersonal aggression, violence, political decision-making, and crime. The finding of genetic influences on aggression and punishment behavior also questions the recently proposed idea that humans are "altruistic" punishers, who willingly punish free-riders for the good of the group. These results support theories of cooperation that propose there are mixed strategies in the population. Some people may punish more than others, and there may be an underlying evolutionary logic for doing so. McDermott is completing a fellowship at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University this year and will begin teaching at Brown this fall. Brown University

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Leatherneck Warriors Book Two The Revolution
by CreateSpace
The second book in the Leatherneck Warriors series takes place during the Cuban Revolution. Lieutenant Larry Monroe and his B-team are assigned to investigate just what the Cuban revolutionaries' intentions are.
When Monroe is just beginning to learn more, he becomes embroiled in a dispute between the Castro brothers and the dangerous Che Guevera. The B-team then jumps into action to save the day.
From the author of Civic Action, Year of the Monkey and the Leatherneck Warriors series, Gene Hays mixes history with fiction in the rich tradition of W.E.B. Griffin and Clive Cussler.
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Leatherneck Warriors Book I: The Beginning
by CreateSpace
Leatherneck Warriors Book I, The Beginning: "It took a moment to adjust his eyes to the low light level emanating from a kerosene lamp in the rear of the tent. Pittman couldn’t see any sign of another guard so he turned over his shoulder to look at Foster and gave him a thumbs-up sign, motioning for Foster to join him. Both Marines grabbed an arm of the Soviet soldier, dragging him back inside the tent. Pittman removed his K-Bar knife from the body, wiped the knife clean on the soldier’s uniform, and placed it back in his sheath. As he looked up, he saw Foster staring dumbly at the object in front of them. In all the excitement of the moment, Pittman hadn’t paid any attention to the object. Now he also stared. In front of them was the strangest looking aircraft either one had ever...
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Leatherneck Warriors Book II The Revolution
by Gene Hays (Author)
From the author of Civic Action, Year of the Monkey and the Leatherneck Warriors series, comes Book II, The Revolution. Lieutenant Larry Monroe and his B-team are assigned a mission to investigate the Cuban revolutionaries, Fidel and Raul Castro. Monroe travels to Mexico City and meets with Raul Castro where he quickly finds himself in trouble with a notorious revolutionary figure. The B-team quickly swings into action, saving the day. Full of intrigue mixed with historical facts and figures, the Leatherneck Warriors Book II is an action packed, behind the scenes look at the beginning of the Cuban Revolution.
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Leatherneck Warriors, Book One: The Beginning
by Gene Hays (Author)
Leatherneck Warriors Book I, The Beginning: "It took a moment to adjust his eyes to the low light level emanating from a kerosene lamp in the rear of the tent. Pittman couldn’t see any sign of another guard so he turned over his shoulder to look at Foster and gave him a thumbs-up sign, motioning for Foster to join him. Both Marines grabbed an arm of the Soviet soldier, dragging him back inside the tent. Pittman removed his K-Bar knife from the body, wiped the knife clean on the soldier’s uniform, and placed it back in his sheath. As he looked up, he saw Foster staring dumbly at the object in front of them. In all the excitement of the moment, Pittman hadn’t paid any attention to the object. Now he also stared. In front of them was the strangest looking aircraft either one...
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Initiation: Xylon Warriors I
by Ruth D Kerce (Author)
Book 1 in the Xylon Warriors series Warrior Braden Koll is on a mission to retrieve DNA-compatible women for breeding on the planet of Xylon. His current assignment is to locate an Earth woman Alexa Sandor found to be a match, and sexually initiate her into The Lair of Xylon. The lesser problem is she doesn't know anything about The Lair, him, or that she is a Xylon by birth. The greater problem is that, after meeting Alexa, Braden wants this woman for himself, even though the Warrior Council decreed she must mate another. Alexa Sandor is experiencing nightmares about a strange planet and a responsibility she doesn't understand. Now a man, supposedly from that planet, has come to "initiate" her into their society. The sexual ceremony, he explains, is to prepare her for breeding,...
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Mounted Warriors: From Alexander the Great and Cromwell to Stuart, Sheridan, and Custer
by Gene Smith (Author)
Men, Horses, and All Kinds of WeaponsIt may startle some people to remember that, little more than a century ago, the horse was not only humanity's primary means of swift transportation, it was also a major participant in warfare. For more than four thousand years, men mounted horses and galloped at one another in large numbers, wielding clubs, axes, lances, swords, bows and arrows, pistols, rifles, and more. They charged into swarms of arrows, hales of bullets, volcanoes of cannon fire, and legions of other men on horseback, chopping, stabbing, hurling spears, and firing guns. And their exploits became the stuff of romance, drama, and legend.Mounted Warriors brings you back through the millennia to discover the beginnings and the development of warfare on horseback and meet some of the...
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by Gene Wright (Author)
Paul Hunter: Husband, Father, Rancher, and now Accidental Warrior A trip to Krakow, Poland, in August 1939 with his wife and young daughter to visit some old friends seems like a good idea to Paul. He has no idea that the horror of Nazi domination will sweep across Eastern Europe or that he and his family will be swept up in the madness. Now Paul is lost in the swirling madness of the Nazi blitzkrieg, and his friends are cast into a concentration camp. With no way to contact home and stranded in wartime Germany, it's up to Paul to save his family and his friends from the horrors of Nazi atrocities. Paul had never intended--had never even considered--fighting anything more than the weather, the land, a drunk cowhand, or an occasional cantankerous longhorn or temperamental pony....
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Warriors: Expanded and Updated Edition: More on Living with Courage, Discipline, and Honor
by Loren W. Christensen (Author)
When he decided to compile Warriors in 2004, Loren W. Christensen identified 37 of the finest warrior authors, warrior trainers and warrior scholars around, and asked them to tell in their own words what being a warrior meant to them. The original contributors came from a diverse mix of fellow warriors, from soldiers, cops and SWAT officers to martial art masters to experts in the fields of workplace violence, theology, and school safety.
Warriors struck a chord among readers all over the country. Reviewers praised the book for providing insight into why, when something bad happens, a few people - the warriors among us - run toward the danger while the majority of us run away. Along with the praise, Christensen also received recommendations for other warriors who should be included...
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Unlock Your Muscle Gene: Trigger the Biological Mechanisms That Transform Your Body and Extend Your Life
by Ori Hofmekler (Author), Joseph Mercola D. O. (Foreword)
Provocatively written yet grounded in science, Unlock Your Muscle Gene is a revolutionary guide to physical transformation and the latest information on muscle conditioning, weight loss, and anti-aging strategies. According to Ori Hofmekler, we need to learn how to trigger the genes that retain and develop our muscles and extend our lives—we need to unleash this innate program that transforms pain to power and makes our bodies thrive. Hofmekler exposes the false theories behind modern fitness and presents the actual biological principles upon which human diet and training should be based. He also details how to combine foods; the right meal timing and meal size; why we need to separate AM foods and PM foods; the ideal fuel to prevent “hitting the wall”; how long and how...
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Warriors Who Win: Never Followed Rules & Dared to be Different
by Gene N. Landrum PhD (Author), Jody Ortiz (Editor)
Non-Fiction book on Warriors who have altered the world by daring to be different and never following rules.
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