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The vital role of oxytocin-;the "love hormone"-;for social attachments is being called into question. More than forty years of pharmacological and behavioral research has pointed to oxytocin receptor signaling as an essential pathway for the development of social behaviors in prairie voles, humans, and other species, but a genetic study publishing in the journal Neuron on January 27 shows that voles can form enduring attachments with mates and provide parental care without oxytocin receptor signaling.

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Devanand Manoli ,Nirao Shah ,Devanand Manoli Labmanoli ,Emily Henderson ,Burroughs Wellcome Fund ,Laboratory Of Stanford University ,Lab Diagnostics ,National Institutes Of Health ,Human Frontiers Science Program ,National Science Foundation ,Larryl Hillblom Foundation Fellowship ,Ap Giannini Foundation Fellowship ,Whitehall Foundation ,Stanford University ,Automation Industry Focus ,National Institutes ,Foundation Fellowship ,Human Frontiers Science ,Oxytocin ,Fell ,Rispr ,Drugs ,Enetic ,Ormone ,Laboratory ,Euron ,Neuroscience ,Eceptor ,Research ,

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