Effects of Oxytocin Administration on Spirituality and Emotional Responses to Meditation.

Author: Van Cappellen P1, Way BM2, Isgett SF3, Fredrickson BL3
Affiliation:
1University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill pattyv@unc.edu.
2The Ohio State University.
3University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Conference/Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci.
Date published: 2016 Jun 17
Other: Pages: nsw078 , Word Count: 173


The oxytocin (OT) system, critically involved in social bonding, may also impinge on spirituality, which is the belief in a meaningful life imbued with a sense of connection to a Higher Power and/or the world. Midlife male participants (N = 83) were randomly assigned to receive intranasal OT or placebo. In exploratory analyses, participants were also genotyped for polymorphisms in two genes critical for oxytocin signaling, the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR rs53576) and CD38 (rs6449182 and rs3796863). Results showed that intranasal OT increased self-reported spirituality on two separate measures and this effect remained significant a week later. It also boosted participants' experience of specific positive emotions during meditation, at both explicit and implicit levels. Furthermore, the effect of OT on spirituality was moderated by OT-related genotypes. These results provide the first experimental evidence that spirituality, endorsed by millions worldwide, appears to be supported by OT.

© The Author (2016). Published by Oxford University Press. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

KEYWORDS: CD38; Emotion; Meditation; OXTR; Oxytocin; Spirituality

PMID: 27317929 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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