Across vertebrate species, intergroup conflict confronts individuals with a tension between group interests best served by participation in conflict and personal interest best served by not participating. Here, we identify the neurohormone oxytocin as pivotal to the neurobiological regulation of this tension in distinctly different group-living vertebrates, including fishes, birds, rodents, non-human primates and humans. In the context of intergroup conflict, a review of emerging work on pro-sociality suggests that oxytocin and its fish and birds homologues, isotocin and mesotocin, respectively, can elicit participation in group conflict and aggression. This is because it amplifies (i) concern for the interests of genetically related or cul...
The role of neuromodulators in the enforcement of cooperation is still not well understood. Here, we...
Human ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's group as centrally important and superior to other gr...
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. In intergroup settings, individ...
Across vertebrate species, intergroup conflict confronts individuals with a tension between group in...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Humans regulate intergroup conflict through parochial altruism; they self-sacrifice to contribute to...
There is currently substantial evidence indicating that oxytocin, a hypothalamus neuropeptide, modul...
Humans live in, rely on, and contribute to groups. Evolution may have biologically prepared them to ...
In recent decades, scientific understanding of the many roles of oxytocin (OT) in social behavior ha...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Humans cooperate with unrelated individuals to an extent that far outstrips any other species. We al...
Intergroup conflict contributes to human discrimination and violence, but persists because individua...
The role of neuromodulators in the enforcement of cooperation is still not well understood. Here, we...
Human ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's group as centrally important and superior to other gr...
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. In intergroup settings, individ...
Across vertebrate species, intergroup conflict confronts individuals with a tension between group in...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Humans regulate intergroup conflict through parochial altruism; they self-sacrifice to contribute to...
There is currently substantial evidence indicating that oxytocin, a hypothalamus neuropeptide, modul...
Humans live in, rely on, and contribute to groups. Evolution may have biologically prepared them to ...
In recent decades, scientific understanding of the many roles of oxytocin (OT) in social behavior ha...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Humans cooperate with unrelated individuals to an extent that far outstrips any other species. We al...
Intergroup conflict contributes to human discrimination and violence, but persists because individua...
The role of neuromodulators in the enforcement of cooperation is still not well understood. Here, we...
Human ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's group as centrally important and superior to other gr...
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. In intergroup settings, individ...