Oxytocin - The Prosocial Hormone?

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Oxytocin and Trust (Kosfeld et al., 2005)

  • Aim: Does oxytocin affect trust in humans?
  • Method: Humans were given either oxytocin intranasally or a placebo
  • The independent variable was what chemical the humans received
  • The dependent variable was their behavior in a trust game: do you trust the investor?
  • In the trust game the participant was an investor who could choose to invest 4 monetary units and possibly get 12 monetary units in return
  • Results: The oxytocin group was more willing to trust the investor
  • Conclusion: This suggests that oxytocin increases our feelings of trustworthiness in others
  • Evaluation: The participants did not earn the money they used in the study
  • You can argue that people are more careful with money they have earned themselves
  • They did a follow up study to ensure that oxytocin was not just increasing riskier behavior

Oxytocin and Empathy (Domes et al., 2007)

  • Aim: Does oxytocin affect empathy in humans?
  • Method: Humans were given either oxytocin intranasally or a placebo
  • The independent variable was what chemical the humans received
  • The dependent variable was their performance on an empathy test called the reading the mind in the eyes test
put reading mind in eyes test pics here
  • Participants took the reading mind in eyes test before the spray and one week later after they were given the spray
  • Results: Oxytocin group scored higher on the reading mind in the eyes test
  • Conclusion This suggests that when oxytocin levels are elevated we become better at reading the emotions in people's eyes
  • Evaluation: Well-controlled study that established a baseline of empathy for all participants before administering the spray
  • Is the reading the mind eyes test the best measure of empathy?
  • Empathy is related to feeling what others may be experiencing and not just reading emotions from eyes
  • The study therefore lacks some external validity

 

Oxytocin Genes and Empathy (Rodrigues et al., 2009)

  • Aim: Do people with different oxytocin producing genes have different empathy capacities?
  • Method: They compared two gene groups AA/AG genes have low oxytocin and GG genes produce more oxytocin
  • The independent variable was the gene group
  • The dependent variable was their performance on the reading the mind in the eyes test
  • Another dependent variable was their trait empathy measured by a questionnaire
  • Results: The GG group scored higher on the reading the mind in the eyes test
  • The GG group also scored higher on the empathy questionnaire
  • Conclusion: Naturally higher levels of oxytocin produced by your genes increases your empathy level
  • Evaluation: Well-controlled study that used 2 measures of empathy to establish a cause and effect relationship between the genes and empathy
  • Is the reading the mind eyes test the best measure of empathy?
  • Empathy is related to feeling what others may be experiencing and not just reading emotions from eyes
  • The study therefore lacks some external validity
  • To add external validity researchers could give participants the opportunity to help someone else in distress which would be a more ecologically valid way of measuring empathy

Oxytocin and Generosity (Zak et al., 2007)

  • Aim: Does oxytocin increase generosity to strangers?
  • Method: Give participants oxytocin or a placebo intranasally and have them split money
  • The independent variable was whether participants received placebo or oxytocin
  • Participants are given 10 USD that they can choose to split with a stranger of keep for themselves
  • The dependent variable was how much participants gave to the stranger
  • Results: Oxytocin group gave larger amounts to the stranger, they were 80% more generous than the placebo group
  • Conclusion: Having higher oxytocin levels can increase generosity in humans toward strangers
  • Evaluation: Well-controlled study to establish a cause and effect relationship between oxytocin and generosity
  • Lacks some ecological validity because the participants did not have a normal social interaction with the strangers

Oxytocin Research Evaluation

  • There is a problem of reductionism. Most research on oxytocin focuses only on positive social behavior
  • There is evidence that oxytocin can actually lead to antisocial behavior
  • Participants who were given oxytocin and won a game where more likely to gloat (Shamay-Tsoory et al., 2009)
  • The participants were happy about the opponent losing and rubbed it in their face
  • Oxytocin has been suggested as a treatment for antisocial behavior like autism
  • Shamay-Tsoory's work shows that it is important not to assume that oxytocin is exclusively positive

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