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Human Aggression and Enumerative Measures of Immunity

Douglas A. Granger, PhD, Alan Booth, PhD and David R. Johnson, PhD

From the Behavioral Endocrinology Laboratory, Department of Biobehavioral Health (D.A.G.), and Department of Sociology (A.B.), Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; and Department of Sociology (D.R.J.), University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE.



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Fig. 1. Number of aggressive acts and probability of being in the top quartile of CD4, CD8, and B cell numbers before and after controlling for testosterone (T), age, health risk behavior, and health status.

 





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