| Oxytocin Enhances Encoding Of Positive Social Memories |
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| Medicine - Hormones & Meds | |||
| Written by TS-Si News Service | |||
| Wednesday, 30 July 2008 17:00 | |||
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Springfield, VA, USA. The hormone Oxytocin continues to attract serious research because of its natural support for nurturant social interactions. The acces point was the hormone's necessary role in milk production for breast-feeding. The evidence increases that the hormone plays an important role in social bonding and maternal behaviors.
A study in Biological Psychiatry shows that one way oxytocin promotes social affiliation in humans is by enhancing the encoding of positive social memories.
Oxytocin Enhances the Encoding of Positive Social Memories in Humans. Adam J. Guastella, Philip B. Mitchell, Frosso Mathews. Biological Psychiatry 64(3) 256-258. Bibliographic information ISSN: 0006-3223
Adam J. Guastella, Ph.D., a Sentior Research Fellow at the Brain & Mind Research Institute at the University of New South Wales (UNSW), and his colleagues sought to evaluate the effects of oxytocin on the encoding and recognition of faces in humans. They recruited healthy male volunteers and in a double-blind, randomized design, administered either oxytocin or a placebo.
The results revealed that those who received oxytocin were more likely to remember the happy faces they had seen previously, more so than the angry and neutral faces. Dr. Guastella notes that the “findings are exciting because they show for the first time that oxytocin facilitates the encoding of positive social information over social information that is either neutral or negative.”
John H. Krystal, M.D., Editor of Biological Psychiatry and affiliated with both Yale School of Medicine and the VA Connecticut Healthcare System, comments on the findings:
Social isolation can be a feature of several psychiatric disorders. The success of oxytocin in enhancing positive social memories raises a potential hypothesis that oxytocin, or drugs that might act like oxytocin in the brain, could be used to help people who are socially isolated and have difficulty making social connections. Future research will be needed to test this hypothesis.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 July 2008 16:28 |






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