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Pheromones
Science of Love
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Scientists
are finding that, after all,
love really is down to a chemical addiction between people
OVER the
course of history it has been artists, poets and playwrights who have
made the greatest progress in humanity's understanding of love. Romance
has seemed as inexplicable as the beauty of a rainbow. But these days
scientists are challenging that notion, and they have rather a lot to
say about how and why people love each other.
Is this useful?
The scientists think so. For a start, understanding the neurochemical
pathways that regulate social attachments may help to deal with defects
in people's ability to form relationships. All relationships, whether
they are those of parents with their children, spouses with their partners,
or workers with their colleagues, rely on an ability to create and maintain
social ties. Defects can be disabling, and become apparent as disorders
such as autism and schizophrenia—and, indeed, as the serious depression
that can result from rejection in love. Research is also shedding light
on some of the more extreme forms of sexual behaviour. And, controversially,
some utopian fringe groups see such work as the doorway to a future where
love is guaranteed because it will be provided chemically, or even genetically
engineered from conception.
You might
as well face it...
Sex stimulates
the release of vasopressin and oxytocin in people, as well as voles, though
the role of these hormones in the human brain is not yet well understood.
But while it is unlikely that people have a mental, smell-based map of
their partners in the way that voles do, there are strong hints that the
hormone pair have something to reveal about the nature of human love:
among those of Man's fellow primates that have been studied, monogamous
marmosets have higher levels of vasopressin bound in the reward centres
of their brains than do non-monogamous rhesus macaques.
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Other approaches
are also shedding light on the question. In 2000, Andreas Bartels and
Semir Zeki of University College, London, located the areas of the brain
activated by romantic love. They took students who said they were madly
in love, put them into a brain scanner, and looked at their patterns of
brain activity.
The results
were surprising. For a start, a relatively small area of the human brain
is active in love, compared with that involved in, say, ordinary friendship.
“It is fascinating to reflect”, the pair conclude, “that the face that
launched a thousand ships should have done so through such a limited expanse
of cortex.” The second surprise was that the brain areas active in love
are different from the areas activated in other emotional states, such
as fear and anger. Parts of the brain that are love-bitten include the
one responsible for gut feelings, and the ones which generate the euphoria
induced by drugs such as cocaine. So the brains of people deeply in love
do not look like those of people experiencing strong emotions, but instead
like those of people snorting coke. Love, in other words, uses the neural
mechanisms that are activated during the process of addiction. “We are
literally addicted to love,” Dr Young observes. Like the prairie voles.
It seems
possible, then, that animals which form strong social bonds do so because
of the location of their receptors for vasopressin and oxytocin. Evolution
acts on the distribution of these receptors to generate social or non-social
versions of a vole. The more receptors located in regions associated with
reward, the more rewarding social interactions become. Social groups,
and society itself, rely ultimately on these receptors. But for evolution
to be able to act, there must be individual variation between mice, and
between men. And this has interesting implications.
Last year,
Steven Phelps, who works at Emory with Dr Young, found great diversity
in the distribution of vasopressin receptors between individual prairie
voles. He suggests that this variation contributes to individual differences
in social behaviour—in other words, some voles will be more faithful than
others. Meanwhile, Dr Young says that he and his colleagues have found
a lot of variation in the vasopressin-receptor gene in humans. “We may
be able to do things like look at their gene sequence, look at their promoter
sequence, to genotype people and correlate that with their fidelity,”
he muses.
It has already
proved possible to tinker with this genetic inheritance, with startling
results. Scientists can increase the expression of the relevant receptors
in prairie voles, and thus strengthen the animals' ability to attach to
partners. And in 1999, Dr Young led a team that took the prairie-vole
receptor gene and inserted it into an ordinary (and therefore promiscuous)
mouse. The transgenic mouse thus created was much more sociable to its
mate.
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Love,
Love me do...
Scanning
the brains of people in love is also helping to refine science's grasp
of love's various forms. Helen Fisher, a researcher at Rutgers University,
and the author of a new book on love, suggests it comes in three flavours:
lust, romantic love and long-term attachment. There is some overlap but,
in essence, these are separate phenomena, with their own emotional and
motivational systems, and accompanying chemicals. These systems have evolved
to enable, respectively, mating, pair-bonding and parenting.
Lust, of
course, involves a craving for sex. Jim Pfaus, a psychologist at Concordia
University, in Montreal, says the aftermath of lustful sex is similar
to the state induced by taking opiates. A heady mix of chemical changes
occurs, including increases in the levels of serotonin, oxytocin, vasopressin
and endogenous opioids (the body's natural equivalent of heroin). “This
may serve many functions, to relax the body, induce pleasure and satiety,
and perhaps induce bonding to the very features that one has just experienced
all this with”, says Dr Pfaus.
Then there
is attraction, or the state of being in love (what is sometimes known
as romantic or obsessive love). This is a refinement of mere lust that
allows people to home in on a particular mate. This state is characterised
by feelings of exhilaration, and intrusive, obsessive thoughts about the
object of one's affection. Some researchers suggest this mental state
might share neurochemical characteristics with the manic phase of manic
depression. Dr Fisher's work, however, suggests that the actual behavioural
patterns of those in love—such as attempting to evoke reciprocal responses
in one's loved one—resemble obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).
That raises
the question of whether it is possible to “treat” this romantic state
clinically, as can be done with OCD. The parents of any love-besotted
teenager might want to know the answer to that. Dr Fisher suggests it
might, indeed, be possible to inhibit feelings of romantic love, but only
at its early stages. OCD is characterised by low levels of a chemical
called serotonin. Drugs such as Prozac work by keeping serotonin hanging
around in the brain for longer than normal, so they might stave off romantic
feelings. (This also means that people taking anti-depressants may be
jeopardising their ability to fall in love.) But once romantic love begins
in earnest, it is one of the strongest drives on Earth. Dr Fisher says
it seems to be more powerful than hunger. A little serotonin would be
unlikely to stifle it.
Wonderful
though it is, romantic love is unstable—not a good basis for child-rearing.
But the final stage of love, long-term attachment, allows parents to co-operate
in raising children. This state, says Dr Fisher, is characterised by feelings
of calm, security, social comfort and emotional union.
Because they
are independent, these three systems can work simultaneously—with dangerous
results. As Dr Fisher explains, “you can feel deep attachment for a long-term
spouse, while you feel romantic love for someone else, while you feel
the sex drive in situations unrelated to either partner.” This independence
means it is possible to love more than one person at a time, a situation
that leads to jealousy, adultery and divorce—though also to the possibilities
of promiscuity and polygamy, with the likelihood of extra children, and
thus a bigger stake in the genetic future, that those behaviours bring.
As Dr Fisher observes, “We were not built to be happy but to reproduce.”
The stages
of love vary somewhat between the sexes. Lust, for example, is aroused
more easily in men by visual stimuli than is the case for women. This
is probably why visual pornography is more popular with men. And although
both men and women express romantic love with the same intensity, and
are attracted to partners who are dependable, kind, healthy, smart and
educated, there are some notable differences in their choices. Men are
more attracted to youth and beauty, while women are more attracted to
money, education and position. When an older, ugly man is seen walking
down the road arm-in-arm with a young and beautiful woman, most people
assume the man is rich or powerful.
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These foolish
things
Of course,
love is about more than just genes. Cultural and social factors, and learning,
play big roles. Who and how a person has loved in the past are important
determinants of his (or her) capacity to fall in love at any given moment
in the future. This is because animals—people included—learn from their
sexual and social experiences. Arousal comes naturally. But long-term
success in mating requires a change from being naive about this state
to knowing the precise factors that lead from arousal to the rewards of
sex, love and attachment. For some humans, this may involve flowers, chocolate
and sweet words. But these things are learnt.
If humans
become conditioned by their experiences, this may be the reason why some
people tend to date the same “type” of partner over and over again. Researchers
think humans develop a “love map” as they grow up—a blueprint that contains
the many things that they have learnt are attractive. This inner scorecard
is something that people use to rate the suitability of mates. Yet the
idea that humans are actually born with a particular type of “soul mate”
wired into their desires is wrong. Research on the choices of partner
made by identical twins suggests that the development of love maps takes
time, and has a strong random component.
Work on rats
is leading researchers such as Dr Pfaus to wonder whether the template
of features found attractive by an individual is formed during a critical
period of sexual-behaviour development. He says that even in animals that
are not supposed to pair-bond, such as rats, these features may get fixed
with the experience of sexual reward. Rats can be conditioned to prefer
particular types of partner—for example by pairing sexual reward with
some kind of cue, such as lemon-scented members of the opposite sex. This
work may help the understanding of unusual sexual preferences. Human fetishes,
for example, develop early, and are almost impossible to change. The fetishist
connects objects such as feet, shoes, stuffed toys and even balloons,
that have a visual association with childhood sexual experiences, to sexual
gratification.
So love,
in all its glory, is just, it seems, a chemical state with genetic roots
and environmental influences. But all this work leads to other questions.
If scientists can make a more sociable mouse, might it be possible to
create a more sociable human? And what about a more loving one? A few
people even think that “paradise-engineering”, dedicated to abolishing
the “biological substrates of human suffering”, is rather a good idea.
As Time
goes by
Progress
in predicting the outcome of relationships, and information about the
genetic roots of fidelity, might also make proposing marriage more like
a job application—with associated medical, genetic and psychological checks.
If it were reliable enough, would insurers cover you for divorce? And
as brain scanners become cheaper and more widely available, they might
go from being research tools to something that anyone could use to find
out how well they were loved. Will the future bring answers to questions
such as: Does your partner really love you? Is your husband lusting
after the au pair?
And then
there are drugs. Despite Dr Fisher's reservations, might they also help
people to fall in love, or perhaps fix broken relationships? Probably
not. Dr Pfaus says that drugs may enhance portions of the “love experience”
but fall short of doing the whole job because of their specificity. And
if a couple fall out of love, drugs are unlikely to help either. Dr Fisher
does not believe that the brain could overlook distaste for someone—even
if a couple in trouble could inject themselves with huge amounts of dopamine.
However,
she does think that administering serotonin can help someone get over
a bad love affair faster. She also suggests it is possible to trick the
brain into feeling romantic love in a long-term relationship by doing
novel things with your partner. Any arousing activity drives up the level
of dopamine and can therefore trigger feelings of romance as a side effect.
This is why holidays can rekindle passion. Romantics, of course, have
always known that love is a special sort of chemistry. Scientists are
now beginning to show how true this is.
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Euphoria - Gain influence over women
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