Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03272321

Influence of Oxytocin on Neurophysiological Responses to Live Faces

Influence of Oxytocin on Neurophysiological Responses to Direct and Averted Gaze

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
56 (actual)
Sponsor
KU Leuven · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years – 35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Previous research has indicated that direct eye gaze compared to averted gaze, elicits a higher skin conductance response (SCR), and a more pronounced left frontal cortex activity than right frontal cortex activity (resulting in positive asymmetry scores). On a behavioral level, participants tend to look shorter at live faces with a direct gaze as compared to averted gaze (Akechi et al., 2013). Further, subjective evaluations showed that a direct gaze is rated more arousing and less pleasant than an averted gaze (Akechi et al., 2013; Hietanen, Leppänen, Peltola, Linna-aho, \& Ruuhiala, 2008). Importantly, oxytocin administration increases the number of fixations and to looking time towards the eye region during live social interaction. Further, oxytocin has been shown to influence SCR and heart rate variability. Therefore, it is conceivable that oxytocin will not only influence the gaze duration of the participant, but also the physiological and neurological responses elicited by direct eye gaze. In this study, the investigators will investigate whether oxytocin modulates the behavioural (eye gaze and subjective ratings), neurological (EEG) and physiological (skin conductance, heart rate and respiration) responses elicited by direct gaze.

Detailed description

Previous research has indicated that direct eye gaze compared to averted gaze, elicits a higher skin conductance response (SCR), and a more pronounced left frontal cortex activity than right frontal cortex activity (resulting in positive asymmetry scores). On a behavioral level, participants tend to look shorter at live faces with a direct gaze as compared to averted gaze (Akechi et al., 2013). Further, subjective evaluations showed that a direct gaze is rated more arousing and less pleasant than an averted gaze (Akechi et al., 2013; Hietanen, Leppänen, Peltola, Linna-aho, \& Ruuhiala, 2008). Importantly, oxytocin administration increases the number of fixations and to looking time towards the eye region during live social interaction. Further, oxytocin has been shown to influence SCR and heart rate variability. Therefore, it is conceivable that oxytocin will not only influence the gaze duration of the participant, but also the physiological and neurological responses elicited by direct eye gaze. In this randomized, placebo controlled, double blinded study, the investigators will investigate whether oxytocin modulates the behavioral and neurophysiological responses elicited by direct gaze. In order to do so, the investigators will measure behavioural (eye gaze and subjective feelings), physiological (skin conductance, blood volume pulse, and respiration) and neurological (EEG) responses during presentations of a live person's face with direct gaze and closed eyes, before and after oxytocin or placebo administration. The investigators hypotheses that oxytocin attenuates the heightened SCR and pronounced EEG asymmetry during direct gaze. Further, they expect that oxytocin increases the number of fixations and duration of those fixations towards the eye region. Exploratory, the investigators will also investigate whether oxytocin administration influences respiration and the subjective reports on experience of live eye contact. Lastly (and also exploratory), they will explore whether certain personality traits (as measured by SAAM (state adult attachment measure) and SRS (social responsiveness scale)) influence the modulatory effect of oxytocin on neurological and behavioural responses. Note that this study is part of a larger study in which the investigators also register several neurophysiological responses (blood volume pulse, respiration, heart rate, EEG, skin conductance) during rest before and after oxytocin or placebo administration.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGOxytocinSyntocinon nasal spray
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo nasal spray

Timeline

Start date
2017-07-24
Primary completion
2018-05-18
Completion
2018-05-18
First posted
2017-09-05
Last updated
2019-08-01

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Belgium

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03272321. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.