In national and worldwide surveys, people regularly rate family and relationships as among the most important things in life and greatest sources of satisfaction and happiness. Yet romantic relationships are also great sources of personal distress. Their dissolution involves great costs to individuals and society (e.g., through loss of productivity, burdens on health services, negative impacts on children). An appreciation of what affects the well-being of relationships requires an understanding of relationship dynamics. Relationship dynamics, in turn, can be affected by women's hormonal status, as it changes through the cycle. A variety of evidence suggests women's social motivations are predicted by levels of ovarian hormones (notably, estrogen and progesterone), as they change across the cycle. During the non-conceptive phase following ovulation, progesterone levels increase. During this time, women may become more sensitive to the well-being of their relationship. Moreover, although oxytocin - a hormone that is thought to play key roles in maintaining close relationships, circulates through women's bodies throughout the cycle. This hormone may particularly affect their attention to partners when progesterone levels increase. Yet no research to date has explored specifically how ovarian hormones and oxytocin might affect relationship dynamics across cycles. This research aims to do so by examining how hormones influence changes in behaviors that strengthen relationships over time, which could enhance public well being.

A sample of 260 naturally ovulating women (ages 18-35) who have been involved in romantic relationships lasting at least 3 months will be recruited for the study. They will participate in 4 sessions, with sessions scheduled to be held at different points within women's cycles. A first session will assess women's own involvement in their relationships: their satisfaction with it, their commitment to it, their passions for it, and the ways they seek to nurture it. Women's views of their partner's involvement will also be assessed. In all 4 sessions, women will be asked about the frequency and intensity of events in their relationship: their particular interests in their partner and in men other than their partner, their concern for intimacy more generally in their relationship, and their efforts to seek intimacy with their partner. Women will also engage in a 10-minute thought-listing task about the relationship, which previous research has shown to produce an oxytocin response (assessed by measuring the hormone in saliva both before and after the task), contingent on relationship involvement. Hormone levels (estradiol [a form of estrogen], progesterone, testosterone, cortisol) will be measured in urine samples collected each session. Statistical analyses will examine how these hormone levels and oxytocin response, both by themselves and in combination, are associated with events key to understanding relationship dynamics, as they vary over time. These findings could provide insights into ways that relationships are strengthened or weakened, and affect public well being.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
1729856
Program Officer
Steven J. Breckler
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2017-09-15
Budget End
2021-08-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
$300,000
Indirect Cost
Name
University of New Mexico
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Albuquerque
State
NM
Country
United States
Zip Code
87131