Oxytocin: The Love Hormone
Before hopping into the big picture of the effects of storytelling on the brain, we’re first going to talk about the tiny molecule behind it all: oxytocin.Oxytocin is a hormone consisting of 9 amino acids which exists as a free polypeptide chain in the blood circulation. It’s produced in a brain region called the paraventricular nucleus, located in the hypothalamus, and is secreted into the bloodstream by the posterior pituitary gland. Secretion depends on electrical activity of neurons in the hypothalamus – it is released into the blood when these cells are excited.
Oxytocin’s main function is to facilitate childbirth in women, which is one of the reasons it is called the “love hormone,” and it does so through stimulating uterine muscles to contract and also increases production of prostaglandin through a positive feedback mechanism. However, oxytocin is also related to attachment and social-related behaviors associated with activity in our brains.
In the brain, oxytocin acts as a chemical messenger to stimulate many human behaviors including recognition, trust, romantic attachment, and bonding--more reasons for why it has been called the “love hormone.” Furthermore, oxytocin increases a sense of empathy among individuals.
Diagram of The Brain and Parts Responsible for Oxytocin
All About Empathy
Empathy is the ability to sense other people’s emotions, coupled with the ability to imagine what someone else might be thinking or feeling. This is particularly helpful for social creatures like humans because it allows us to determine if people around us are angry or kind, dangerous or safe, friend or foe.
Empathy seems to have deep roots in our brains and bodies, and in our evolutionary history as well. Empathy makes us reach out to others, first just emotionally, but later in life also by understanding their situation. This capacity likely evolved because it served our ancestors’ survival in two ways. First, like every mammal, we need to be sensitive to the needs of our offspring. Second, our species depends on cooperation, which means that we do better if we are surrounded by healthy, capable group mates. Taking care of them is just a matter of enlightened self-interest. Elementary forms of empathy have even been observed in our primate relatives, in dogs, and even in rats.
Scientists have speculated that some aspects of empathy can be traced to mirror neurons, cells in the brain that fire when we observe someone else perform an action in much the same way that they would fire if we performed that action ourselves. Research has also uncovered evidence of a genetic basis to empathy. Heritability of two different subcomponents of empathy have been studied: affective empathy, or a person’s ability to feel what someone else is feeling, and cognitive empathy, or a person’s ability to understand another person’s feelings and reasoning. Based on the results of these tests, it's estimated that affective empathy is between 52-57 percent heritable and cognitive empathy is about 27 percent heritable, presumably influenced more by environment and learning experiences.
To read more about the evolution of empathy, check out this blog post!
When we hear stories from other people, the same sensory centers in both of our brains are used. According to a study conducted by neuroscientists at Princeton University, “Communication is a shared activity resulting in a transfer of information across brains…[D]uring successful communication, speakers’ and listeners’ brains exhibit joint, temporally coupled, response patterns.” These neuroscientists found that when listening to a well-told story, the exact same areas of the brain light up on an MRI in both the storyteller and listener. In other words, your brain, as the listener, mirrors the brain of the storyteller.
Putting it all together: The Science Behind Storytelling
So, the question to be asked now is: How does this all relate to our interest in storytelling??
When we hear stories from other people, the same sensory centers in both of our brains are used. According to a study conducted by neuroscientists at Princeton University, “Communication is a shared activity resulting in a transfer of information across brains…[D]uring successful communication, speakers’ and listeners’ brains exhibit joint, temporally coupled, response patterns.” These neuroscientists found that when listening to a well-told story, the exact same areas of the brain light up on an MRI in both the storyteller and listener. In other words, your brain, as the listener, mirrors the brain of the storyteller.
Including stories told through movies, TV shows, books, etc., once a narrative has sustained our attention long enough, we may begin to emotionally resonate with the story's characters. Narratologists call this “transportation.” To experience narrative transportation, the audience should experience empathy with the characters. Social psychologists Geoff Kaufman and Lisa Libby argue that when audiences take the perspectives and experiences of the characters in the story, they “lose themselves and assume the identity of the character, adopting the character’s thoughts, emotions, goals, traits, and actions and experiencing the narrative as though they were that character.”
When we hear a story that best resonates with us, our levels of oxytocin increase and makes the brain’s reward centers more responsive to social contact (also resulting in an increase in empathy), which is one of the reasons why we have favorite TV shows or books.
Transportation truly is an amazing neural concept! We become invested in a story, even though we aren’t observing/experiencing it firsthand (and it may even be fictional), and our empathy mimics the emotions we imagine the characters must be feeling. We then begin to feel those emotions ourselves! Some of the most famous characters stick with us because we empathize with their experiences, whether that is the feeling of shock when Darth Vader reveals to Luke that he’s his father, or excitement when Elle Woods wins her court case.
So, the next time you watch literally any Pixar movie, blame your inevitable tears on your brain’s ability to take you into another person’s shoes.
This is super interesting! I never really thought about the biochemical occurrences within our brains when we hear stories, and especially not about WHY we feel the emotions we feel. I think it's so cool that storytellers' and listeners' brains quite literally mirror each other throughout the course of an engaging tale, and that's got me wondering if there's something biologically determined about the people who can tell the best stories and engage the widest audience possible. I also love that you threw in a couple memes, and, from what I gather, you seem to be a pretty great storyteller yourself! (Does that mean that my brain patterns and oxytocin levels are the same right now as yours were when you wrote this?)
ReplyDeleteThis is super interesting! I love a good story but I have never given much thought as to why we are able to connect so well with characters and why we are able to become so entrenched in it. I never considered that empathy and the ability to put ourselves in someone else's shoes could be advantageous in terms of evolution. I think it's super cool that evolution has helped us develop empathy which gives us the ability to mimic the emotions that our favorite characters feel.
ReplyDeleteThat is so cool. Since we are social and rely on others for everything it makes total sense that empathy would be evolutionary. It is easier to help someone when you understand them or "walk a mile in their shoes". Sharing stories makes us happy just like being outside or active. It is so interesting.
ReplyDeleteThis is so well written and interesting! The connection between empathy and biochemical and social science is really cool and something I've never thought about. It's also really interesting how this is tied into evolution too! It's nice to think that everyone is biologically capable of empathy, and that it could be inherited!
ReplyDeleteHailey! This was so interesting and you are such a great writer. I learned so much from your post- how empathy and social science link together. You tied this to so many aspects of AP Bio I think thats awesome.
ReplyDeleteWoah, this is so cool! I really love movies and books, so it was really interesting to learn about chemical explanation for my emotional reactions to them. Empathy is such a big part of the human experience, and you did a great job explaining it. Thanks for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteThis is such a good post topic!! It never occurred to me that empathy was something that could be inherited, but it makes perfect sense. (I always cry at up too!) And you are a beautiful writer.
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