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The present paper builds upon a growing body of work documenting oxytocin's role in social functioning, to test whether this hormone facilitates spontaneous mimicry of others' emotional expressions. In a double-blind, randomized trial, adult Caucasian males (n = 145) received a nasal spray of either oxytocin or placebo before completing a facial mimicry task. Facial expressions were coded using automated face analysis. Oxytocin increased mimicry of facial features of sadness (lips and chin, but not areas around the eyes), an affiliative reaction that facilitates social bonding. Oxytocin also increased mimicry of happiness, but only for individuals who expressed low levels of happiness in response to neutral faces. Overall, participants did not reliably mimic expressions of fear and anger, echoing recent theoretical accounts of emotional mimicry as dependent on the social context. In sum, our findings suggest that oxytocin facilitates emotional mimicry in ways that are conducive to affiliation, pointing to a possible pathway through which oxytocin promotes social bonding.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.104377

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2019-11-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

109

Keywords

Affiliation, Automated facial coding, Emotional mimicry, Empathy, Hormones, Oxytocin, Administration, Intranasal, Adult, Anger, Double-Blind Method, Emotions, Facial Expression, Facial Muscles, Facial Recognition, Fear, Happiness, Humans, Male, Oxytocin, Social Perception, Young Adult