A journey from speech to dance through the field of oxytocin

Compr Psychoneuroendocrinol. 2023 Jul 31:16:100193. doi: 10.1016/j.cpnec.2023.100193. eCollection 2023 Nov.

Abstract

In this article, I am going through my scientific and personal journey using my work on oxytocin as a compass. I recount how my scientific questions were shaped over the years, and how I studied them through the lens of different fields ranging from linguistics and neuroscience to comparative and population genomics in a wide range of vertebrate species. I explain how my evolutionary findings and proposal for a universal gene nomenclature in the oxytocin-vasotocin ligand and receptor families have impacted relevant fields, and how my studies in the oxytocin and vasotocin system in songbirds, humans and non-human primates have led me to now be testing intranasal oxytocin as a candidate treatment for speech deficits. I also discuss my projects on the neurobiology of dance and where oxytocin fits in the picture of studying speech and dance in parallel. Lastly, I briefly communicate the challenges I have been facing as a woman and an international scholar in science and academia, and my personal ways to overcome them.

Keywords: Dance; Language; Oxytocin; Songbirds; Speech; Vasopressin; Vasotocin; Vocal learning.

Publication types

  • Review