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Marriage, Committed Romance reduce Stress
Hormone Production
Newswise, August 2010 — Being married has
often been associated with improving
people’s health, but a new study suggests
that having that long-term bond also alters
hormones in a way that reduces stress.
Unmarried people in a committed, romantic
relationship show the same reduced responses
to stress as do married people, said Dario
Maestripieri, Professor in Comparative Human
Development at the University of Chicago and
lead author of the study, published in the
current issue of the journal Stress.
“These results suggest that single and
unpaired individuals are more responsive to
psychological stress than married
individuals, a finding consistent with a
growing body of evidence showing that
marriage and social support can buffer
against stress,” Maestripieri writes in the
article, “Between- and Within-sex Variations
in Hormonal Responses to Psychological
Stress in a Large Sample of College
Students.”
The team of researchers from the University
of Chicago and Northwestern University
studied 500 masters’ degree students at the
University of Chicago Booth School of
Business. About 40 percent of the men and 53
percent of the women were married or in
relationships. The group included 348 men
with a mean age of 29 and 153 women with a
mean age of 27.
The students were asked to play a series of
computer games that tested economic
behaviors, and saliva samples were taken
before and after to measure hormone levels
and changes.
Each student was told that the test was a
course requirement, and it would impact
their future career placement. That made the
test a potentially stressful experience that
could affect levels of cortisol, known as
the stress hormone.
The researchers found cortisol
concentrations increased in all
participants, but that females experienced a
higher average increase than males. The
exercise also decreased testosterone in male
subjects, but not in females, a stress
effect previously observed in humans and
animals.
But a piece of personal information
collected before the test provided another
interesting difference within the subjects.
“We found that unpaired individuals of both
sexes had higher cortisol levels than
married individuals,” Maestripieri said.
“Although marriage can be pretty stressful,
it should make it easier for people to
handle other stressors in their lives,”
Maestripieri said. “What we found is that
marriage has a dampening effect on cortisol
responses to psychological stress, and that
is very new.”
The study also found that single business
school students also displayed higher
baseline testosterone levels than their
married or committed colleagues, a finding
that mirrors previous human research as well
as animal observations.
Maestripieri, who conducts the majority of
his research on monkeys in Puerto Rico, said
that in species of primates and birds where
males assist females with rearing offspring
show similar changes. In species that show
monogamous pairing and shared rearing of
offspring, testosterone levels in males drop
as they engage in more fatherly behavior.
Maestripieri’s co-authors are former
University of Chicago student Nicole Baran,
AB ’09, now a graduate student at Cornell
University; Luigi Zingales, the Robert C.
McCormack Professor of Entrepreneurship and
Finance, University of Chicago Booth School
of Business; and Paola Sapienza, Professor
of Finance at Northwestern’s Kellogg School
of Management.
The Templeton Foundation helped support the
study with a grant.