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    Home»Biology»Study Finds That Testosterone Promotes “Cuddling”
    Biology

    Study Finds That Testosterone Promotes “Cuddling”

    By Emory UniversitySeptember 7, 20223 Comments6 Mins Read
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    Gerbil Testosterone
    The research was conducted with Mongolian gerbils, rodents that form lasting pair bonds and raise their pups together. The work showed the nuanced effects of testosterone, depending on context. It also revealed how testosterone influences the neural activity of oxytocin cells, the so-called love hormone associated with social bonding. Credit: Aubrey Kelly

    The hormone seems to help animals quickly switch between prosocial and antisocial behaviors.

    According to a recent animal study, testosterone may encourage males to be sociable and friendlier. The research on Mongolian gerbils was conducted by Emory University neuroscientists and was recently published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

    “For what we believe is the first time, we’ve demonstrated that testosterone can directly promote nonsexual, prosocial behavior, in addition to aggression, in the same individual,” says Aubrey Kelly, Emory assistant professor of psychology and first author of the study. “It’s surprising because normally we think of testosterone as increasing sexual behaviors and aggression. But we’ve shown that it can have more nuanced effects, depending on the social context.”

    Additionally, the research demonstrated how testosterone affects the brain activity of oxytocin cells, the so-called “love hormone” linked to social bonding.

    Richmond Thompson, a neuroscientist at Emory University’s Oxford College, is one of the study’s co-authors.

    Recent research conducted in Kelly’s lab on rodent experimental models has focused on the brain effects of oxytocin. Thompson’s group explores the neural effects of steroids in fish. Both researchers are attempting to understand how hormones function in the brain to enable an animal to quickly alter its behavior based on the social situation.

    Kelly and Thompson live together as a married couple in addition to sharing this research interest.

    “The idea for this paper was borne out of us talking together over a glass of wine,” Kelly says. “It blends our two research worlds.”

    The majority of human studies demonstrate that testosterone increases aggressive behavior. Kelly and Thompson questioned if testosterone would potentially, simultaneously with its ability to promote hostility against intruders, also reduce prosocial behaviors. They also hypothesized that it may accomplish something more radical: it would actually boost positive social reactions in situations when behaving prosocially is appropriate.

    The Kelly group performed research on Mongolian gerbils, rodents that create long-lasting pair bonds and nurture their offspring together, to answer this question. While males may become violent during mating and in defense of their territory, they also display cuddling and protective behavior toward their offspring once a female gets pregnant.

    In one experiment, a male gerbil was introduced to a female gerbil. After they developed a pair connection and the female got pregnant, the males displayed the typical cuddling behaviors toward their partners.  The male individuals were subsequently given testosterone injections by the researchers. They hypothesized that the subsequent acute rise in a male’s testosterone level would reduce his cuddling behaviors since testosterone is generally an antisocial molecule.

    “Instead, we were surprised that a male gerbil became even more cuddly and prosocial with his partner,” Kelly says. “He became like ‘super partner.’”

    In a follow-up experiment a week later, the researchers conducted a resident-intruder test. The females were removed from the cages so that each male gerbil that had previously received a testosterone injection was alone in his home cage. An unknown male was then introduced into the cage.

    “Normally, a male would chase another male that came into its cage, or try to avoid it,” Kelly says. “Instead, the resident males that had previously been injected with testosterone were more friendly to the intruder.”

    The friendly behavior abruptly changed, however, when the original male subjects were given another injection of testosterone. They then began exhibiting normal chasing and/or avoidance behaviors with the intruder. “It was like they suddenly woke up and realized they weren’t supposed to be friendly in that context,” Kelly says.

    The researchers theorize that because the male subjects experienced a surge in testosterone while they were with their partners, it not only rapidly increased positive social responses toward them but also primed the males to act more prosocially in the future, even when the context changed and they were in the presence of another male. However, the second testosterone injection then rapidly prompted them to switch their behavior to become more aggressive, as appropriate to the context of a male intruder.

    “It appears that testosterone enhances context-appropriate behavior,” Kelly says. “It seems to play a role in amplifying the tendency to be cuddly and protective or aggressive.”

    The laboratory experiments, in a sense, slowed down what the males might experience almost simultaneously in the wild. In their natural habitat, Kelly explains, mating with a partner elevates testosterone, which primes them to act cuddly in the moment and in the near future while living with their partner, even if the testosterone levels decline.

    If a rival entered its burrow the gerbil would likely experience another surge of testosterone that would immediately help adjust his behavior so he can fend off the rival and protect his pups. Testosterone then appears to help animals rapidly pivot between prosocial and antisocial responses as the social world changes.

    The current study also looked at how testosterone and oxytocin interact biologically. The results showed that the male subjects receiving injections of testosterone exhibited more oxytocin activity in their brains during interactions with a partner compared to males that did not receive the injections.

    “We know that systems of oxytocin and testosterone overlap in the brain but we don’t really understand why,” Kelly says. “Taken together, our results suggest that one of the reasons for this overlap may be so they can work together to promote prosocial behavior.”

    Rather than just flipping an “on” or “off” button to modulate behaviors, hormones seem to play a more nuanced role, Kelly says. “It‘s like a complicated dashboard where one dial may need to move up a bit while another one moves down.”

    Human behaviors are far more complex than those of Mongolian gerbils, but the researchers hope that their findings provide a basis for complementary studies on other species, including humans.

    “Our hormones are the same, and the parts of the brain they act upon are even the same,” Thompson says. “So, learning how hormones like testosterone help other animals adjust to rapidly changing social contexts will not only help us understand the biological nuts and bolts that affect their behavior but also predict and ultimately understand how the same molecules in human brains help shape our own responses to the social world around us.”

    Reference: “Beyond sex and aggression: testosterone rapidly matches behavioural responses to social context and tries to predict the future” by Aubrey M. Kelly, Jose Antonio Gonzalez Abreu and Richmond R. Thompson, 8 June 2022, Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences.
    DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0453

     The study was funded by the National Science Foundation.

    Brain Emory University Hormones National Science Foundation Neuroscience
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    3 Comments

    1. LG on September 11, 2022 5:31 am

      As an animal researcher, I want to offer some info that may benefit your use of malapropisms.
      * Never does the word “cuddling occur. Prosocial behavior is non-aggressive behaviors, such as mating, sniffing and interacting with an unknown animal, amongst other non-aggressive behaviors.
      *” antisocial” is not the opposite of prosocial behaviors. Antisocial is that which goes against societal norms, destructive human behavior (e.g., stealing cars).

      All the best – L

      Reply
    2. Emily on September 11, 2022 1:55 pm

      Do “scientists” ever feel badly about torturing innocent and small, defenseless animal’s for “research”? Do they not believe in the Universal phenomenon known as karma?

      Reply
      • Chris Hotte on September 25, 2023 5:20 am

        No. The concept of karma has never been shown to exist with any statistical significance in double blind studies.

        Reply
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