4.4 Article

Endocrinological effects of social exclusion and inclusion: Experimental evidence for adaptive regulation of female fecundity

期刊

HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
卷 130, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.104934

关键词

Social support; Social stress; Ostracism; Fertility regulation; Estradiol; Progesterone

资金

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. University of California Intercampus Consortium for Health Psychology Seed Grant
  3. U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA95501510137]
  4. U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) [FA95501510137] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)

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Women's hormonal changes in response to social exclusion were found to be significantly influenced by their background levels of social support, highlighting the crucial impact of social support on female reproductive hormone levels.
When current conditions are probabilistically less suitable for successful reproduction than future conditions, females may prevent or delay reproduction until conditions improve. Throughout human evolution, social support was likely crucial to female reproductive success. Women may thus have evolved fertility regulation systems sensitive to cues from the social environment. However, current understanding of how psychological phenomena might affect female ovarian function is limited. In this study, we examined whether cues of reduced social support?social ostracism?impact women?s hormone production. Following an in-lab group bonding task, women were randomly assigned to a social exclusion (n = 88) or social inclusion (n = 81) condition. After social exclusion, women with low background levels of social support experienced a decrease in estradiol relative to progesterone. In contrast, socially-included women with low background social support experienced an increase in estradiol relative to progesterone. Hormonal changes in both conditions occurred specifically when women were in their mid-to-late follicular phase, when baseline estradiol is high and progesterone is low. Follow-up analyses revealed that these changes were primarily driven by changes in progesterone, consistent with existing evidence for disruption of ovarian function following adrenal release of follicular-phase progesterone. Results offer support for a potential mechanism by which fecundity could respond adaptively to the loss or lack of social support.

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