Not exactly. A sudden increase in testosterone does (typically, because human biology is complicated) result in a significantly higher sex drive, and can result in shifting priority from emotion to sex. The effects aren't permanent, however - once hormone levels settle out and the person acclimates to the higher baseline testosterone level, the sex drive usually revs back down (though it may remain higher than the previous pre-testosterone jump level) and prioritization can reconfigure because the brain and body are no longer blaring alarm klaxons at the hormonal changes.
no subject
Not exactly. A sudden increase in testosterone does (typically, because human biology is complicated) result in a significantly higher sex drive, and can result in shifting priority from emotion to sex. The effects aren't permanent, however - once hormone levels settle out and the person acclimates to the higher baseline testosterone level, the sex drive usually revs back down (though it may remain higher than the previous pre-testosterone jump level) and prioritization can reconfigure because the brain and body are no longer blaring alarm klaxons at the hormonal changes.