Suckling infants trigger surges of trust hormone in mothers' brains |
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Researchers from the University of Warwick, in collaboration with other universities and institutes in Edinburgh, France and Italy, have for the first time been able to show exactly how, when a baby suckles at a mother's breast, it starts a chain of events that leads to surges of the "trust" hormone oxytocin being released in their mothers' brains. |
The study, published on 18th July in the
journal PLoS Computational Biology, focuses on the role of oxytocin, a very
important hormone recently found be involved in the enhancement of "trust" and
love in humans and animals. Oxytocin has long been known to be the trigger that,
when released into the blood, causes milk to be let down from the mammary gland.
When oxytocin is released within the brain, it also helps to strengthen the bond
between mother and child, but to have these effects, a very large amount must be
released abruptly to cause a wave of the hormone that can spread through the
brain. |
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| Source: http://www.warwick.ac.uk/ |
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