Scientists have already established that the hormone oxytocin is a
trigger for love and affection. Now they have discovered that babies
raised for their first two years in orphanages do not produce the same
levels of oxytocin as children raised by their biological parents.



In a test designed to elicit cuddling and affection, Seth D. Pollak
<http://psych.wisc.edu/childemotion/pdfs/Pollak_AMP_Nov061.pdf>   and
his colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Madison 
<http://www.wisc.edu>  recruited 18 toddlers adopted from places such as
Russia and Romania and an equal number of children with biological
parents. Each toddler sat on his or her mother�s lap while playing
an interactive game with instructions such as �tickle your
partner�s tummy� and �hug your partner.� The
children completed the same game on the lap of a friendly female
stranger. The biological children showed a rise in oxytocin after
playing with their own mother but not after playing with the female
stranger. Yet the adopted children showed no rise in either case.



Pollack does not want to alarm would-be adopted parents but wants to
inform the early childhood field so that measures can be found to help
adopted children bond early on. �These are children who start their
lives in some very horrendous conditions, and within a day, their word
changes,� Pollak says. �It may be that the child�s
comfort system isn�t kicking in.� Psychiatry professor C. Sue
Carter <http://www.psych.uic.edu/faculty/Carter.htm>   of the University
of Illinois  <http://www.uic.edu>  at Chicago says there are ways to
improve bonding, adding that hormones � are not destiny.�



Happy Learning,



Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>



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