The Hour Between Dog and Wolf Paperback by John Coates
The Hour Between Dog and Wolf Paperback by John Coates
Product Details
- Publisher: Vintage Canada (2013-04-23)
- Language: English
- Paperback: 320 pages
- ISBN-13: 9780307359681
- Item Weight: 328.86 grams
- Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.8 cm
A successful Wall Street trader turned Cambridge neuroscientist reveals the biology of financial boom and bust, showing how risk-taking transforms our body chemistry, driving us to extremes of euphoria or stressed-out depression.
The laws of financial boom and bust, it turns out, have a lot to do with male hormones. In a series of startling experiments, Canadian scientist Dr. John Coates identified a feedback loop between testosterone and success that dramatically lowers the fear of risk in men, especially young men; he has vividly dubbed the moment when traders transform into exuberant high flyers "the hour between dog and wolf." Similarly, intense failure leads to a rise in levels of cortisol, which dramatically lowers the appetite for risk. His book expands on his seminal research to offer lessons from the exploding new field studying the biology of risk. Coates's conclusions shed light on all types of high-pressure decision-making, from the sports field to the battlefield, and leave us with a powerful recognition: to handle risk isn't a matter of mind over body, it's a matter of mind and body working together. We all have it in us to be transformed from dog to wolf.
About the Author
JOHN COATES gave up running a derivatives desk on Wall Street to pursue studies in neurology and neuroendocrinology at Cambridge, where he is now a senior research fellow in Neuroscience and Finance. He and his team conducted a groundbreaking series of physiological experiments with traders in London to test his hypothesis that hormones aggravate, perhaps even create, cycles of boom and bust. The results, first published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, form the core of his first book. Coates was born and raised in Canada, and now lives in England with his wife and two sons.
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