Oxytocin and Love

Oxytocin: The Neurobiological Mystery of Love and Attachment

Recorded Sunday 26 June 2022

With Professor Sue Carter, Professor Ruth Feldman and Dr Janice Hiller

CPD Credits: 3.5 hours

This conference focuses on the extraordinary neuropeptide oxytocin, and how it enables love, safe attachment and affiliative social bonds to flourish throughout life. Oxytocin supports perceived safety, reproduction and even survival, acting as an anti-inflammatory agent that also protects us from certain diseases. It is a natural medicine and a source of pleasure, connection and passion.

Research has shown that oxytocin is crucial for secure bond formation, and this must include a bond between therapist and client.

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FULL PROGRAMME

Sue Carter
Oxytocin and Love: Myths and mysteries

Understanding the relationship between oxytocin and love offers access to secrets for optimizing wellbeing and health in a world filled with threat and fear. The goal of this presentation is to deconstruct some of the current myths and mysteries that surrounds this phenomenon. Oxytocin is a peptide hormone that can support perceived safety, reproduction and eventually survival. It acts as an anti-inflammatory agent, serving as an internal “fire-extinguisher” with potential benefits for every tissue in the body and against most diseases. Both love and oxytocin support prosocial solutions to stress across the lifespan and are components of nature’s most powerful medicines.

The benefits are especially apparent in the context of chronic stress and trauma. Both are evolutionarily modern and comparatively slow solutions to challenges associated with life on earth. However, they have evolved interactions with more primitive physiological systems – including stress hormones and immune factors – that use more individualistic and faster solutions to stress. In the long-term these more ancient solutions are adaptive but inherently dangerous. We shall consider its effect on resilience and long-term well-being.

Ruth Feldman
Oxytocin: In the building of love and when love breaks

Oxytocin is an ancient neuroendocrine system that underpins the human capacity to form and maintain affiliative bonds between parents and children, among romantic partners, and with close friends, mentors, and therapists. In this talk, Ruth will describe the model of “biobehavioral synchrony” and talk about the role of oxytocin in the formation of attachment bonds. Ruth will then present studies on some specific disruptions in the oxytocin system when maternal-infant bonding fails, including longitudinal follow-ups of maternal post-partum depression, premature birth, and chronic stress and trauma. We will conclude by pinpointing the role of oxytocin in resilience throughout life.

Q&A

Janice Hiller
Developmental Deprivation, Oxytocin and the Couple Relationship

Couples who struggle with intimacy, both emotional and physical, frequently ask for help with their relationship and may be difficult to treat. Whereas many people enjoy being held and touched by a loved one, some people experience the closeness required by a partner as a stressful demand. There are many factors over the course of childhood development that contribute to adult issues with physical interactions, but absence of parental care is often a feature. Research has shown that oxytocin is crucial for secure bond formation, and the brain’s ability to secrete oxytocin depends in part on sufficient love and care from infancy onwards. Although a direct link between developmental neglect, oxytocin and relationship issues with a romantic partner cannot be made with certainty, it seems highly likely that these factors are connected. In this talk Janice will describe case examples that illustrate how problems with touch and closeness may be traced to insecure early attachment, and how this impact later on physical expression in the couple relationship.

Q&A With all speakers

FEES

Includes: 1 year’s access, test and CPD Certificate of Attendance, subtitles and transcript

INDIVIDUAL

£60 (or £48 Confer member)

GROUP RATE

£50pp in groups of over 10 (please apply to accounts@confer.uk.com)

CPD

A certificate of attendance may be applied for (3.5 hours CPD) on the basis of passing a multiple choice questionnaire.

SCHEDULE

00:05:39
Sue Carter

00:54:29
Ruth Feldman

01:46:21
Q&A

02:03:13
Janice Hiller

02:43:54
Q&A With all speakers

03:34:39
End