4.7 Article

Oxytocin enhances neural approach towards social and non-social stimuli of high personal relevance

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-02914-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Flanders Fund for Scientific Research [FWO G079017N, FWO 1257621 N]
  2. Society in Science-ETH Zurich
  3. KU Leuven [ELG-D2857-C14/17/102]
  4. Marguerite-Marie Delacroix foundation

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The study found that oxytocin not only enhanced both behavioral and neural approach-avoidance, especially towards negative pictures of both social and non-social nature. This challenges the notion that oxytocin's effects are specific to social stimuli and supports the General Approach-Avoidance Hypothesis of oxytocin in amplifying the motivational salience of environmental stimuli with high personal relevance.
Oxytocin (OT) plays a pivotal role in a variety of complex social behaviors by modulating approach-avoidance motivational tendencies, but recently, its social specificity has been challenged. Here, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study was conducted with forty young adult men, investigating the effect of a single-dose of OT (24 IU) on behavioral and neural approach-avoidance. Frontal alpha asymmetry, indexing neurophysiological approach-avoidance, was obtained from electroencephalographic recordings while participants were presented with a series of pictures, individually rated in terms of personal relevance (i.e., high versus low positive/negative emotional evocativeness) and categorized as social or non-social. Additionally, participants could prolong (approach) or shorten (avoid) the viewing-time of each picture, providing a measure of behavioral approach-avoidance. Intranasal OT enhanced both behavioral and neural approach (increased viewing-time), particularly towards negatively valenced pictures of both social and non-social nature, thus challenging the notion that OT's effects are specific to social stimuli. Neurally, OT specifically amplified approach-related motivational salience of stimuli that were self-rated to have high personal relevance, but irrespective of their social nature or rated affective valence (positive/negative). Together, these findings provide support to the General Approach-Avoidance Hypothesis of OT, suggesting a role of OT in amplifying the motivational salience of environmental stimuli with high (personal) relevance, but irrespective of their social/non-social nature.

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