Oxytocin promotes lying for personal gain in a genotype-dependent manner

Category Primary study
Pre-printbioRxiv
Year 2018
Society values honesty, since it fosters trust in others. Although we have a strong moral aversion to lying, particularly when it is self-serving, we nevertheless lie quite frequently and the biological basis for this is poorly understood. The hypothalamic neuropeptide oxytocin has been implicated in a number of anti-social as well as pro-social behaviours, including lying to benefit in-group members or in competitive situations. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of oxytocin administration on self-serving lying behaviour and possible moderating effects of genetic underpinnings of the oxytocin receptor. A total of 161 adult men participated in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled between-subject intranasal oxytocin administration (24 International Units) study where self-serving lying was assessed using the die-in-a-cup paradigm. Additionally, contributions of polymorphisms in the oxytocin receptor gene were investigated using a haplotype approach. Results showed that while placebo-treated subjects behaved honestly across three successive rounds, oxytocin administration promoted self-serving lying, particularly in the third / last round and only to a certain degree (not to the maximum). Moreover, this effect of oxytocin was strongest in carriers of the GCG individual haplotype (rs237887-rs2268491-rs2254298) and non-carriers of the GT individual haplotype (rs53576-rs2268498) on the oxytocin receptor gene. Overall our findings demonstrate that oxytocin administration can promote self-serving lying when subjects are given repeated opportunities to lie and that these effects are moderated by genetic underpinnings of the oxytocin receptor.
Epistemonikos ID: 967a32cb200cb600ca77c1380e79817bbbdda323
First added on: Jan 15, 2025