Oxytocin administration alters HPA reactivity in the context of parent-infant interaction
Hypotheses:
Oxytocin administration has an effect on the father and infant overall salivary cortisol response in the context of a social stressor and the degree of parent-infant synchronicity moderates the effect.
Design: double-blind, placebo-controlled, within subject design.
Variables Measured, Instruments Used :
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Father’s affect: PANAS Questionnaire
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Child stress: Face-To-Face-Still-Face (FTFSF) interactions
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Oxytocin levels, Salivary Cortisol, Gaze Synchrony
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Parent Stress Index Short Form
Participants
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N= 35 healthy father-infant dyads
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Participant ages: fathers were 22-38 (avg 29.7 years); infants 5 months old (range 4-8)
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Location: 2 laboratory visits 1 week apart
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Eligibility: exclusion criteria included father’s smoking, chronic mental or physical illness, and medication intake. Infants included 18 healthy females, 17 health males, 68.5% were first born. Exclusion criteria for infants included premature birth, labor or birth related complications, multiple birth, or illness.
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SES: educated, middle class
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Additional profile: All fathers were married to the infant’s mother.
Limitations
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Current results offer insights into the ability to shape an infant’s endocrine stress response without direct intervention, but further studies are needed.
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This study does not directly manipulate oxytocin levels in infants, the effects of which are still not completely understood.
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As oxytocin was administered to the father, future studies are needed to understand the multi-level effects of oxytocin in both the subject (in this case the father) across subjects, and the relational effects of infants/children.
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This study was limited to educated, middle class males (and their infants) therefore different results may be found if replicated in diverse socioeconomic, cultural, high risk, and/or age specific groups.
Finding(s)
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Oxytocin administration to the parent altered both the parent and infant physiological and behavioral response the social stressor.
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Oxytocin administration to father increased the father’s cortisol response to the social stressor (i.e., the father’s cortisol levels increased when they did not respond to the infant’s cues).
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Oxytocin administered to the father altered the infant’s cortisol response, suggesting biological synchronicity.
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This effect was moderated by the nature of the parent-infant attachment.
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Oxytocin administered to the father impacted the “high attachment” infants by increasing their (stress) salivary cortisol when the father was “withdrawn” through still face.
- Oxytocin administered to the father impacted the “low attachment” infants more by reducing their (stress) salivary cortisol when the father was “withdrawn” through still face.