Oxytocin, which is better known for its role in inducing sexual attraction and orgasm, makes females understand and tend to their babies' needs.
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Assistant Professor Robert Froemke, senior investigator of the study, said that the findings redefine oxytocin as something completely different from a ’love drug,’ but more as an amplifier and suppressor of neural signals in the brain. The hormone turns up the volume of social information processed in the brain.
In the study conducted on mice, Dr. Froemke and his team mapped oxytocin to unique receptor cells in the left side of the brain’s cortex.
In separate experiments in adult female mice with no pups, and hence no experience with elevated oxytocin levels, adding extra oxytocin into their "virgin" brains led these mice to quickly recognize the barely audible distress calls of another mother’s pups recently removed from their home nest. These adult mice quickly learned to set about fetching the pups, picking them up by the scruffs of their necks and returning them to the nest - all as if they were the pups’ real mother.
This learned behavior was permanent, researchers say; the mice with no babies’ continued to retrieve pups even when their oxytocin receptors were later blocked.
Lead study investigator Bianca Marlin, PhD, said that it was remarkable to watch how adding oxytocin shifted animal behavior, as mice that didn’t know how to perform a social task could suddenly do it perfectly.
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Source-ANI