Love hormone nasal spray could cure shyness
September 24th, 2010 - 12:04 pm ICT by ANILondon, Sep 24 (ANI): A nasal spray of the so-called love hormone oxytocin can actually cure shyness, found a new study.
While oxytocin is known to increase empathy and bonding - especially in parents and their children, it is now that researchers have found it could help wallflowers overcome awkwardness in social situations.
However, it has little effect on those who are naturally confident.
The finding could have implications for those with severe social deficiencies, often apparent in conditions like autism.
Researchers at Israel’s Seaver Autism Center for Research and Treatment and Columbia University were examining whether the hormone, which occurs naturally in the body could make us more understanding of others.
They conducted a test of 27 healthy adult men, giving them the hormone or a placebo via a nasal spray and then asking them to perform an ‘empathic accuracy task’ - which measures their powers of reading the thoughts and feelings of others.
This involved watching others discussing emotional moments in their lives, then rating how they felt those people were feeling.
The scientists also measured the participants’ social competency, using a test known as AQ, which is usually used in autistic patients.
They found that oxytocin did improve powers of empathy - but only among those who were less socially proficient in the first place.
The more socially comfortable participants performed well on the empathetic task regardless of whether they were on oxytocin or placebo.
But less socially proficient participants performed significantly better on oxytocin, with their empathetic powers performance identical to that of the more outgoing participants.
“Oxytocin is widely believed to make all people more empathetic and understanding of others,” the Telegraph quoted Prof Jennifer Bartz, of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, as saying.
“Our study contradicts that. Instead, oxytocin appears to be helpful only for those who are less socially proficient.
“Our data show that oxytocin selectively improves social cognition in people who are less socially proficient, but had little impact on more socially proficient individuals.
“While more research is required, these results highlight the potential oxytocin holds for treating social deficits in people with disorders marked by deficits in social functioning like autism,” he added.
The study has been published in Psychological Science. (ANI)
- Oxytocin, love hormone, could cure shyness - Sep 26, 2010
- Cuddle chemical improves social cognition only in less socially proficient people - Sep 22, 2010
- Oxytocin activates brain function in autistic kids - May 20, 2012
- Nasal spray raises hope for autistics - Feb 14, 2010
- Nasal spray could make you more outgoing - Dec 11, 2011
- 'Cuddle chemical' could help schizophrenics - Jul 17, 2010
- Cuddle chemical boosts flagging male libido - Apr 09, 2012
- 'Cuddle' spray to make men more loveable - May 01, 2010
- Love hormone could also trigger war - Jun 12, 2010
- Bonding hormone-based nasal spray helps men recognise emotions - May 15, 2010
- Love hormone also fosters kindness among monkeys - Jan 06, 2012
- Oxytocin improves social behaviour of autistics - Feb 17, 2010
- Does 'love hormone' also foster trust? - Aug 25, 2010
- Oxytocin helps soldiers like fellow, hate enemy - Jun 12, 2010
- Genes may determine our ability to empathize - Nov 18, 2009
Tags: adult men, aq, autism center, autistic patients, awkwardness, bartz, columbia university, emotional moments, empathic accuracy, hormone oxytocin, mount sinai school, mount sinai school of medicine, nasal spray, oxytocin, parents and their children, school of medicine, seaver, social competency, social situations, thoughts and feelings