Selective attention towards infants in nulliparous women across the menstrual cycle
Research in women showed that testosterone is associated with decreased selective attention towards infant stimuli, which can be compensated for by oxytocin administration. In theory, caregiving behavior is thought to be mediated by oxytocin. Oxytocin binds to dopaminergic neurons and thus supposedl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hormones and behavior 2024-04, Vol.160, p.105492, Article 105492 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Research in women showed that testosterone is associated with decreased selective attention towards infant stimuli, which can be compensated for by oxytocin administration. In theory, caregiving behavior is thought to be mediated by oxytocin. Oxytocin binds to dopaminergic neurons and thus supposedly motivates aspects of caregiving through its influence on dopaminergic transmission. Most previous studies on caregiving behaviors were thereby performed in women under hormonal contraception to avoid hormonal fluctuations. However, recent studies repeatedly demonstrated decisive influences of the hormonal changes across the female menstrual cycle on dopamine-mediated behaviors, suggesting that estradiol acts as dopamine agonist in the follicular phase and progesterone as dopamine antagonist in the luteal phase. In the present study, we investigated selective attention towards infants as one central aspect of caregiving behavior over the natural menstrual cycle and in relation to interindividual differences of estradiol and progesterone. As expected, we found that women with higher estradiol in the follicular phase also showed higher selective attention towards infant faces among adult distractors, whereas the correlation disappeared in the luteal phase. In contrast, progesterone did not correlate with selective attention towards infants. The present findings collectively support the assumption that estradiol may act as dopamine agonist in the follicular phase, thereby supposedly promoting an important aspect of caretaking behavior.
•Study assessed how menstrual cycle hormones modify selective attention to infants.•We used correlative hormone analyses and comparisons between cycle phases.•Positive correlation between estradiol and attention to infants in follicular phase•No influence of progesterone on selective attention to infants•Estradiol may act as dopamine agonist and influences caregiving behaviors. |
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ISSN: | 0018-506X 1095-6867 1095-6867 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2024.105492 |