How Oxytocin Makes a Mom: Hormone Teaches Maternal Brain to Respond to Offspring's Needs

Research could lead to advanced treatments for social anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and other brain behavioral issues

Written byNYU Langone Medical Center
| 2 min read
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Neuroscientists at NYU Langone Medical Center have discovered how the powerful brain hormone oxytocin acts on individual brain cells to prompt specific social behaviors - findings that could lead to a better understanding of how oxytocin and other hormones could be used to treat behavioral problems resulting from disease or trauma to the brain. The findings are to be published in the journal Nature online April 15.

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