Hormone supplementation in rhesus monkeys points to potential autism treatment

Credit: Kathy West

For years, Florida Tech’s Catherine Talbot, an assistant professor of psychology, has worked to understand the sociality of male rhesus monkeys and how low-social monkeys can serve as a model for humans with autism. Her most recent findings show that replenishing a deficient hormone, vasopressin, helped the monkeys become more social without increasing their aggression—a…

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News Source: medicalxpress.com

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