Oxytocin: hitting a small nail with a giant sledgehammer?




Autism Science Foundation Weekly Science Report show

Summary: This week’s podcast is <a href="https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160620160158.htm">inspired by a new study in PNAS</a> thatlooked at the role of methylation of the oxytocin receptor in social behavior in people without autism.  Together with studies of the brains of people with autism, it suggests that filling the brains with oxytocin may not be the best approach for treating social impairments.  Instead, compounds that turn on or turn off the genes that control oxytocin may be more appropriate, and it also may help explain variability in why some people respond to oxytocin treatment, and why others do not.   Also, scientific technology has a new way of studying the influence of the environment on brain development.<br>