Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Linnen AM" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Interpersonal functioning in adolescent offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Linnen AM, aan het Rot M, Ellenbogen MA, Young SN 18692905
CRDH
2 Chronic stress and stressful life events in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Ostiguy CS, Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Walker EF, Hammen C, Hodgins S 18814916
CRDH
3 High cortisol levels in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder during two weeks of daily sampling. Ellenbogen MA, Santo JB, Linnen AM, Walker CD, Hodgins S 20148869
CRDH
4 Elevated daytime cortisol levels: a biomarker of subsequent major affective disorder? Ellenbogen MA, Hodgins S, Linnen AM, Ostiguy CS 21329985
CRDH
5 Acute intranasal oxytocin improves positive self-perceptions of personality. Cardoso C, Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM 22012170
CRDH
6 Intranasal oxytocin and salivary cortisol concentrations during social rejection in university students. Linnen AM, Ellenbogen MA, Cardoso C, Joober R 22044077
CRDH
7 The acute effects of intranasal oxytocin on automatic and effortful attentional shifting to emotional faces. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Grumet R, Cardoso C, Joober R 22092248
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Intranasal oxytocin impedes the ability to ignore task-irrelevant facial expressions of sadness in students with depressive symptoms. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Cardoso C, Joober R 22902063
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Salivary cortisol and interpersonal functioning: an event-contingent recording study in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Santo JB, aan het Rot M, Hodgins S, Young SN 23131593
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Stress-induced negative mood moderates the relation between oxytocin administration and trust: evidence for the tend-and-befriend response to stress? Cardoso C, Ellenbogen MA, Serravalle L, Linnen AM 23768973
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Intranasal oxytocin attenuates the human acoustic startle response independent of emotional modulation. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Cardoso C, Joober R 25082371
CRDH

 

Title:Intranasal oxytocin and salivary cortisol concentrations during social rejection in university students.
Authors:Linnen AMEllenbogen MACardoso CJoober R
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22044077?dopt=Abstract
Publication:
Keywords:
PMID:22044077 Category:Stress Date Added:2019-06-07
Dept Affiliation: CRDH
1 Centre for Research in Human Development, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Description:

Intranasal oxytocin and salivary cortisol concentrations during social rejection in university students.

Stress. 2012 Jul;15(4):393-402

Authors: Linnen AM, Ellenbogen MA, Cardoso C, Joober R

Abstract

Oxytocin facilitates pro-social behaviour and is proposed as a regulatory factor controlling stress reactivity. Previous research on oxytocin and stress has focused on achievement-related stressors among male participants. The aims of the study were to (1) examine the influence of oxytocin on the affective and cortisol response to the Yale Interpersonal Stressor (YIPS), a live social rejection paradigm, and (2) to replicate the finding that women exhibit a greater cortisol response to interpersonal stress than men (Stroud et al. 2002). Sex differences in stress responses: Social rejection versus achievement stress. Biol Psychiat 53:318-327. Ninety-six undergraduate students underwent the YIPS, where participants were excluded from two separate conversations by two same-sex confederates. Salivary cortisol concentrations and mood were repeatedly measured throughout the study. Participants were administered, in a double-blind design, a single dose of intranasal oxytocin (24 IU) or placebo prior to beginning the YIPS. The YIPS elicited a significant negative mood response that was more pronounced in females than in males. However, no significant cortisol response to the stressor and no sex difference in cortisol reactivity were observed. A significant effect of drug condition on cortisol levels was observed. Participants who were administered oxytocin exhibited a decrease in cortisol levels, relative to placebo, during the YIPS, F (4, 184)=4.50, p<0.05. The study failed to replicate the sex difference in the cortisol response to interpersonal stress reported by Stroud et al. (2002). Intranasal oxytocin, however, appeared to reduce cortisol concentrations during an interpersonal challenge.

PMID: 22044077 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]





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