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ArtikelTend and Befriend : Biobehavioral Bases of Affiliation Under Stress  
Oleh: Taylor, Shelley E.
Jenis: Article from Journal - e-Journal
Dalam koleksi: Current Directions in Psychological Science vol. 15 no. 06 (Dec. 2006), page 273-277.
Topik: Oxytocin; Opioids; Tending; Befriending; Affiliation
Fulltext: 02. Tend and Befriend - Biobehavioral Bases of Affiliation Under Stress.pdf (99.55KB)
Isi artikelIn addition to fight-or-flight, humans demonstrate tending and befriending responses to stress— responses underpinned by the hormone oxytocin, by opioids, and by dopaminergic pathways. 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. Oxytocin is implicated in the seeking of affiliative contact in response to stress, and, in conjunction with opioids, it also modulates stress responses. Specifically, in conjunction with positive affiliative contacts, oxytocin attenuates psychological and biological stress responses, but in conjunction with hostile and unsupportive contacts, oxytocin may exacerbate psychological and biological stress responses. Although significant paradoxes remain to be resolved, a mechanism that may underlie oxytocin’s relation to the health benefits of social support may be in view.
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