Publication | Closed Access
The Neurobiology of Trust
264
Citations
9
References
2004
Year
This is the first report that endogenous oxytocin in humans is related to social behaviors, which is consistent with a large animal literature. Subjects are put into a social dilemma in which absent communication, cooperative behavior can benefit both parties randomly assigned to a dyad. The dilemma arises because one participant must make a monetary sacrifice to signal the degree of trust in the other before the other's behavioral response is known. We show that receipt of a signal of trust is associated with a higher level of peripheral oxytocin than that in subjects receiving a random monetary transfer of the same average amount. Oxytocin levels were also related to trustworthy behavior (sharing a greater proportion of the monetary gains). We conclude that oxytocin may be part of the human physiology that motivates cooperation.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1995 | 5.5K | |
2003 | 2.1K | |
1992 | 833 | |
1979 | 832 | |
1998 | 468 | |
An estrogen-dependent four-gene micronet regulating social recognition: A study with oxytocin and estrogen receptor-α and -β knockout mice Elena Choleris, Jan-Ακε Gustafsson, Kenneth S. Korach, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Affective NeuroscienceNeuroendocrinologyEstrogen ReceptorSocial SciencesReproductive Endocrinology | 2003 | 384 |
1985 | 285 | |
1961 | 179 | |
1979 | 56 |
Page 1
Page 1