Oxytocin facilitates social approach behavior in women

In challenging environments including both numerous threats and scarce resources, the survival of an organism depends on its ability to quickly escape from dangers and to seize opportunities to gain rewards. The phylogenetically ancient neurohormonal oxytocin (OXT) system has been shown to influence...

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Published inFrontiers in behavioral neuroscience Vol. 8; p. 191
Main Authors Preckel, Katrin, Scheele, Dirk, Kendrick, Keith M., Maier, Wolfgang, Hurlemann, René
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Research Foundation 27.05.2014
Frontiers Media S.A
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Summary:In challenging environments including both numerous threats and scarce resources, the survival of an organism depends on its ability to quickly escape from dangers and to seize opportunities to gain rewards. The phylogenetically ancient neurohormonal oxytocin (OXT) system has been shown to influence both approach and avoidance (AA) behavior in men, but evidence for comparable effects in women is still lacking. We thus conducted a series of pharmacological behavioral experiments in a randomized double-blind study involving 76 healthy heterosexual women treated with either OXT (24 IU) or placebo intranasally. In Experiment 1, we tested how OXT influenced the social distance subjects maintained between themselves and either a female or male experimenter. In Experiment 2, we applied a reaction time based AA task. In Experiment 3 we investigated effects on peri-personal space by measuring the lateral attentional bias in a line bisection task. We found that OXT specifically decreased the distance maintained between subjects and the male but not the female experimenter and also accelerated approach toward pleasant social stimuli in the AA task. However, OXT did not influence the size of peri-personal space, suggesting that it does not alter perception of personal space per se, but rather that a social element is necessary for OXT's effects on AA behavior to become evident. Taken together, our results point to an evolutionarily adaptive mechanism by which OXT in women selectively promotes approach behavior in positive social contexts.
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This article was submitted to the journal Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience.
Reviewed by: Richard A. I. Bethlehem, University of Cambridge, UK; Steve W. C. Chang, Yale University, USA
These authors have contributed equally to this work.
Edited by: Daeyeol Lee, Yale University School of Medicine, USA
ISSN:1662-5153
1662-5153
DOI:10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00191