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	<title>Symptom Advice .com &#187; mount sinai school of medicine</title>
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		<title>&#8216;Love Hormone&#8217; Arouses Suspicion, Too</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/love-hormone-arouses-suspicion-too/</link>
		<comments>http://symptomadvice.com/love-hormone-arouses-suspicion-too/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2011 01:00:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[hormone symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[insecurity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mount sinai school of medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reassurance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social psychology]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[SAN ANTONIO — Oxytocin, a hormone &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; a rosy reputation &#102;&#111;&#114; getting people to love, trust and generally &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101; nice &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#111;&#110;&#101; another, &#099;&#097;&#110; &#103;&#101;&#116; &#100;&#111;&#119;&#110; and dirty, &#097;&#099;&#099;&#111;&#114;&#100;&#105;&#110;&#103; to evidence presented on Jan. 28 at the annual meeting of the Society &#102;&#111;&#114; Personality and Social Psychology. This brain-altering substance apparently amplifies whatever social proclivities [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p><img src="http://symptomadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/1296608417-82.jpg" style="clear:both;clear:both;margin:0 15px 15px 0" />
<p>SAN ANTONIO — Oxytocin, a hormone &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; a rosy reputation &#102;&#111;&#114; getting people to love, trust and generally &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101; nice &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#111;&#110;&#101; another, &#099;&#097;&#110; &#103;&#101;&#116; &#100;&#111;&#119;&#110; and dirty, &#097;&#099;&#099;&#111;&#114;&#100;&#105;&#110;&#103; to evidence presented on Jan. 28 at the annual meeting of the Society &#102;&#111;&#114; Personality and Social Psychology.</p>
<p>This brain-altering substance apparently amplifies whatever social proclivities a person &#097;&#108;&#114;&#101;&#097;&#100;&#121; possesses, whether positive or negative, &#115;&#097;&#121;&#115; psychologist Jennifer Bartz of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.</p>
<p>Previous work &#104;&#097;&#115; shown &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; a nasal blast of the hormone encourages a &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; trusting person to become more trusting (Science News Online: &#109;&#097;&#121; 21, 2008), but &#110;&#111;&#119; Bartz and &#104;&#101;&#114; colleagues &#102;&#105;&#110;&#100; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; it &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101;&#115; a highly suspicious person more uncooperative and hostile than &#101;&#118;&#101;&#114;.</p>
<p>“Oxytocin &#100;&#111;&#101;&#115; not simply &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101; everyone feel more secure, trusting and prosocial,” Bartz &#115;&#097;&#121;&#115;.</p>
<p>These new results raise concerns about plans &#098;&#121; some researchers to administer oxytocin to people &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; autism and other psychiatric conditions &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; include social difficulties, she adds.</p>
<p>Her team studied 14 people diagnosed &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; borderline personality disorder and 13 volunteers &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#110;&#111; psychiatric conditions. Symptoms of borderline personality disorder include severe insecurity about relationships, fears of abandonment and constant, needy reassurance-seeking from partners.</p>
<p>Borderline personality disorder &#117;&#115;&#117;&#097;&#108;&#108;&#121; occurs in women, but Bartz’s sample included four men. &#104;&#101;&#114; group of healthy participants included seven men.</p>
<p>Members of each group played a computer game &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#097;&#110; experimenter posing &#097;&#115; a research volunteer. In each of three rounds, volunteers &#104;&#097;&#100; to predict whether &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; partner would cooperate &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; them, &#115;&#111; &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; each player &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101; $6, or if the partner would leave the game in order to claim $4 &#097;&#108;&#111;&#110;&#101;.</p>
<p>Volunteers who suspected the partner of bad intent &#099;&#111;&#117;&#108;&#100; leave the game early and claim $4 &#102;&#111;&#114; themselves.</p>
<p>Borderline personality players of &#098;&#111;&#116;&#104; sexes left the game early far more &#111;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#110; &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; receiving &#097;&#110; oxytocin nasal spray than &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; whiffing a placebo spray. Inhaling the hormone prodded &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; &#097;&#108;&#114;&#101;&#097;&#100;&#121; high levels of hostile suspicion and depleted minimal reserves of trust, Bartz suggests.</p>
<p>Psychiatrically healthy players became more cooperative in the money game &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; getting oxytocin, relative to &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; placebo responses.</p>
<p>Nasally inhaling oxytocin &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; magnifies men’s memories of &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; mothers &#097;&#115; being &#101;&#105;&#116;&#104;&#101;&#114; supportive or not, Bartz &#115;&#097;&#121;&#115;. &#104;&#101;&#114; team &#104;&#097;&#100; 31 men &#102;&#105;&#108;&#108; out surveys on the quality of &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; relationships &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#116;&#104;&#101;&#105;&#114; mothers &#117;&#112; to age 16.</p>
<p>Those who described &#103;&#111;&#111;&#100; maternal relationships remembered mom &#097;&#115; substantially more caring and supportive &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; receiving oxytocin, compared &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; inhaling a placebo spray. &#116;&#104;&#111;&#115;&#101; whose early home life &#104;&#097;&#100; been troubled remembered mom &#097;&#115; &#109;&#117;&#099;&#104; less caring and supportive &#097;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#114; oxytocin, versus placebo.</p>
<p>Bartz’s team initially described oxytocin’s two-sided influence on men’s maternal memories in the Dec. 14 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.</p>
<p>These findings underscore &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; “oxytocin is not a love hormone; its effects vary in different people,” remarks psychologist Greg Norman of Ohio State University in Columbus.</p>
<p>Norman and his colleagues &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; found &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; oxytocin stimulates the heart to beat more in sync &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; the breathing cycle in people &#119;&#105;&#116;&#104; healthy social lives, but not in people who report constant loneliness.</p>
<p>Other researchers &#104;&#097;&#118;&#101; &#114;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#110;&#116;&#108;&#121; reported &#116;&#104;&#097;&#116; oxytocin stimulates greater trust of members of one’s &#111;&#119;&#110; ethnic group and greater suspicion of other ethnicities.</p>
<p>Image: Foxtongue/Flickr.</p>
<p><strong>See &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111;:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>&#8216;Cuddle Chemical&#8217; &#097;&#108;&#115;&#111; Fuels Favoritism, Bigotry</li>
<li>Testosterone &#109;&#097;&#107;&#101;&#115; People Suspicious of &#111;&#110;&#101; Another</li>
<li>The Difficulty of Loving Strangers</li>
<li>Pharmaceutical Love Potion: Not &#121;&#101;&#116; …</li>
</ul>
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