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The Steroid/Peptide Theory of Social Bonds: Integrating testosterone and peptide responses for classifying social behavioral contexts

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TLDR
The Steroid/Peptide Theory of Social Bonds (S/P Theory), which integrates T and peptides to provide a model, set of predictions, and classification system for social behavioral contexts related to social bonds, is presented.
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This article is published in Psychoneuroendocrinology.The article was published on 2011-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 251 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Aggression & Poison control.

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Testosterone and cortisol are negatively associated with ritualized bonding behavior in male macaques

TL;DR: The results suggest that low testosterone levels may be beneficial to same-sex bonding and lowered cortisol levels could reflect increased bonding and perceived social support as male-infant-male interactions predict future coalition formation in this species.
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Transmission of paternal retrieval behavior from fathers to sons in a biparental rodent.

TL;DR: For example, the authors found that males exposed to higher levels of paternal retrieval in development altered their adult retrieval behavior with their offspring and exhibited more physical activity and stereotypy, indicating that paternal retrieval levels are transmitted across generations and may function via mechanisms separate from huddling/ grooming.
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Hormonal Profile in Response to an Empathic Induction Task in Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence: Oxytocin/Testosterone Ratio and Social Cognition

TL;DR: In this article , the effects of an empathic induction task on endogenous sOXT, sT and sC levels, as well as their hormonal ratios, in intimate partner violence perpetrators were analyzed.
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The "Challenge Hypothesis": Theoretical Implications for Patterns of Testosterone Secretion, Mating Systems, and Breeding Strategies

TL;DR: This model indicates that there may be widely different hormonal responses to male-male and male-female interactions and presumably equally plastic neural mechanisms for the transduction of these signals into endocrine secretions.
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Neuroendocrine perspectives on social attachment and love

TL;DR: A review of existing behavioral and neuroendocrine perspectives on social attachment and love reveals a recurrent association between high levels of activity in the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis and the subsequent expression of social behaviors and attachments.
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Oxytocin, vasopressin, and human social behavior.

TL;DR: This review focuses on recent knowledge of the behavioral, endocrine, genetic, and neural effects of OT and AVP in humans and provides a synthesis of recent advances made in the effort to implicate the oxytocinergic system in the treatment of psychopathological states.
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Evidence for a Neuroendocrinological Foundation of Human Affiliation: Plasma Oxytocin Levels Across Pregnancy and the Postpartum Period Predict Mother-Infant Bonding

TL;DR: Plasma oxytocin levels at early pregnancy and the postpartum period were related to a clearly defined set of maternal bonding behaviors, including gaze, vocalizations, positive affect, and affectionate touch; to attachment-related thoughts; and to frequent checking of the infant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tend and Befriend Biobehavioral Bases of Affiliation Under Stress

TL;DR: A working model of affiliation under stress suggests that oxytocin may be a biomarker of social distress that accompanies gaps or problems with social relationships and that may provide an impetus for affiliation.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (11)
Q1. What are examples of nurturant behavioral contexts?

Actual examples of nurturant behavioral contexts could include grooming, feeding, pair bond existence, huddling, and other close warm contact. 

Given that parent-offspring bonds are likely to be evolutionarily older, pair bonds may be predicated upon a neuroendocrine system that evolved to support parent-offspring bonds but in general promotes nurturance (Fisher, 1992; Carter, 1998; Fernandez-Duque et al., 2009). 

The authors used the S/P Theory to develop a hypothesis about the tricky behavioral context of cuddling, a hypothesis which the authors tested in a follow-up study. 

Like others, the authors define pair bonds as long-lasting affiliations involving intimacy, sexualcontact, preferential proximity, and emotional attachment with relative exclusivity (Hawkes, 2004). 

Actual examples of social bonding could include sexual intimacy, nurturant intimacy, loneliness (i.e., the need for social bonding), social conflict resolution (e.g., arguments with loved ones that arise out a of need to strengthen a bond), etc. Consistent with the above, OT facilitates social cognitions and empathy in humans (Bos et al., 2011). 

They are generally defined by social and sexual “monogamy,” and though extra-pair sexual contacts occur, pair bonds still limit sexual access to others. 

Their example with cuddling highlights the importance of incorporating T into research on intimacies, even though intimacy is typically studied only in conjunction with peptides, and T is only studied in conjunction with competition. 

This reasoning should apply only to partner cuddling, and the authors predict that parent-child cuddling should decrease T as a low T nurturant behavior (unless it is experienced as infant defense, which should accordingly increase T; a testable viable alternative hypothesis). 

Though findings link high OT with pair bonds and partner closeness, other research demonstrates a complementary role for OT, that is, as tied to the need or desire for social bonds. 

Low T is related to nurturance, i.e. social behavioral contexts that involve loving warm contact with others (e.g. partners/mates, offspring, friends, etc.) (and this may possibly transpire via conversation of T to estradiol, and estrogenic facilitation of peptides). 

T is a favorable candidate for testing these distinct evolutionary functions, since it is positively linked to sexuality but negatively linked to nurturance (van Anders and Watson, 2006b; Ziegler et al., 2009), and because it is so strongly implicated in tradeoffs relevant to pair bonding (Wingfield et al., 1990; Ketterson et al., 2005; Bales et al., 2006; van Anders and Watson, 2006b).