Journal article

Oxytocin as an indicator of psychological and social well-being in domesticated animals: A critical review

JL Rault, M van den Munkhof, FTA Buisman-Pijlman

Frontiers in Psychology | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2017

Abstract

Oxytocin is often portrayed as a hormone specific to social behavior, reflective of positive welfare states, and linked to mental states. Research on oxytocin in domesticated animal species has been few to date but is rapidly increasing (in dog, pig, cattle, sheep), with direct implications for animal welfare. This review evaluates the evidence for the specificity of oxytocin as an indicator of: 1. Social, 2. Positive, and 3. Psychological well-being. Oxytocin has most often been studied in socially relevant paradigms, with a lack of non-social control paradigms. Oxytocin research appears biased toward investigating positive valence, with a lack of control in valence or arousal. Oxytocin act..

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University of Melbourne Researchers