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Oxytocin

Can taking the hormone oxytocin make people more sociable, trusting and loving? Is there a use for oxytocin in helping people with autism become more sociable?

The hormone oxytocin is involved in mother and baby bonding and in creating trust. Linda Geddes finds out if taking oxytocin can help people with autism become more sociable.

Larry Young, professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Emory University in Atlanta, talks about the work in voles that demonstrated the role of oxytocin in pair bonding.

Professor Markus Heinrichs, of Freiburg University in Germany, tells Linda Geddes about doing the first research on oxytocin in human subjects. He was one of the authors of an influential paper on the hormone and trust, published in Nature in 2005.

As journalists for New Scientist, Linda and her husband, Nic, invited one of the other authors of that paper, Professor Paul Zak of Claremont Graduate University in Califormia, to carry out an oxytocin experiment at their wedding.

At Cambridge University, Dr Bonnie Auyeung, is currently carrying out studies to find out if giving the hormone to adults with autism can improve their social skills.

And, Professor Jennifer Bartz, from McGill University in Canada, explains how some research suggests that oxytocin doesn't always make people be more trusting and loving. She says the outcome depends on your previous relationship with the person.

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 4 Aug 2013 23:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 29 Jul 2013 18:32GMT
  • Tue 30 Jul 2013 01:32GMT
  • Tue 30 Jul 2013 08:32GMT
  • Sat 3 Aug 2013 09:32GMT
  • Sun 4 Aug 2013 23:32GMT

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