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愛情與大腦神經 -- J. Bryner
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People Fall in Love, Brain and Soul

Jeanna Bryner
LiveScience Managing Editor

When it comes to falling in love, the brain may be just as involved as the heart, new research finds.

Stephanie Ortigue of Syracuse University and her colleagues reviewed and ran statistical analyses on past brain research aimed at understanding love and found that 12 areas of your brain seem to be working together when just a glimpse at Mr. Right or Ms. Right makes you swoon.

Ortigue said the analysis, detailed in a recent issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine, will be followed up by a study that suggests it takes about a fifth of a second to fall in love. That study has been submitted to a scientific journal and is expected to be released soon.

While "love is one of the most important concepts in life," Ortigue said it is not well understood. "As a scientist I wanted to bring some rationality to the irrational, and to see if love exists in the brain," Ortigue told LiveScience.

The team found that when a person falls in love, different areas of the brain release euphoria-inducing chemicals such as dopamine, oxytocin (the so-called love hormone), adrenaline and vasopressin (known from animal studies to cause aggression and territorial behavior).

Other studies have suggested blood levels of nerve growth factor (NGF), a protein that plays a role in the survival and maintenance of brain cells, also increase. Those levels were found to be significantly higher in couples who had just fallen in love. Ortigue said this molecule also plays an important role in the social chemistry between humans, or the phenomenon of love at first sight.

"These results confirm love has a scientific basis," she added.

Romantic love

And not all love is created equal. The analysis found that different parts of the brain are activated for different types of love. For example, in the first brain study of romantic love, researchers recruited 17 volunteers who were "truly, deeply and madly in love" with a partner. [Related: Romantic Love Is an Addiction]

When gazing at their significant others, the participants showed brain activity in the so-called dopaminergic subcortical system shown to be active in people who were under the influence of euphoria-inducing drugs such as cocaine. This same high, rather than motivating one to seek out drugs, might motivate a person to pursue a love interest, Ortigue suggested. In addition, passionate love also seemed to activate brain regions associated with emotional behaviors, such as sexual arousal. That finding supports research showing a couple's sexual satisfaction and their feelings of love are linked.

In addition, studies showed an area of the brain involved in body image, or how a person understands and pictures oneself, was more activated in passionate love than other types of love. ""When love doesn't go well, instead of focusing on what's going wrong between the two partners we might want to study how they represent their body image for themselves." A better body image might also lead to a better relationship.

Maternal love

In a 2004 study published in the journal Neuroimage, researchers focused on maternal love in the brains of 20 mothers. Brain activity was monitored while moms looked at pictures of their own child, of another child of the same age with whom they were acquainted, their best friend, and of another acquaintance.

Compared with passionate-love brain activity that had been measured in a prior study, the researchers found maternal love, but not the romantic kind, showed up in a region deep in the middle of the brain called periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) - an area that contains receptors for mother-child bonding.

In a 2009 study of unconditional love, Mario Beauregard of the University of Montreal and colleagues had 17 participants look at pictures showing children and adults with intellectual disabilities. Then, the participants looked at those same pictures, but this time they had to generate feelings of unconditional love toward the images. Results showed significant brain activity in some of the brain's reward systems (also linked to passionate and mama-child love), along with the PAG region implicated in maternal love. Ortigue said maternal and unconditional love likely rely on similar processes in the brain.

Since higher-order thinking regions of the brain were implicated in love, the researchers point out in the journal article: "This reinforces the fact that love is more than a basic emotion. Love also involves cognition."

Ortigue's follow-up study, about the speed of love in the human brain, suggests that when a person sees a potential mate, brain regions go to work reviewing past experiences. In a flash, the brain processes can mean the difference between feeling butterflies in your stomach (he or she is the one) or not.

Both findings could help scientists understand what it means to fall in love and why we get so heartbroken after a breakup.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20101027/sc_livescience/peoplefallinlovebrainandsoul



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種族歧視是一種情緒反應
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這些是在炎腦一帶處理的反應, 與肌肉的反射動作比較靠近!


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種族偏見與大腦神經 -- J. Cloud
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They All Look the Same: How Racism Works Neurologically

John Cloud , 11/24/10

You've heard the racial epithet: All you people look the same. It's detestable, but a new study shows that the racist observation happens to be true. To members of one race, members of another race are far more difficult to differentiate.

The study, written by a European team led by Luca Vizioli of the University of Glasgow and published in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, begins by noting that humans are remarkably skilled at facial recognition: we can differentiate family members and friends from strangers in far less than a second. (More on Time.com: The Authentic Self: How Do You Know If You're 'Really' Racist or Sexist?)

And yet as long ago as 1914, an academic publication called the Journal of Criminal Law and Police Science published an article saying it takes us longer to tell apart members of races other than our own. "To the uninitiated American," the authors wrote, "all Asiatics look alike, while to the Asiatics, all White men look alike."

The authors of the new study set out to discover why this "perceptual illusion," as they call it, has persisted.

To study how we see others' faces, they looked at electrical signals coming from the heads of 12 people of East Asian descent and 12 people of Caucasian descent as they viewed photos of members of their own and the other race. Previous studies had looked at whites only.

The signals are measured with electroenchephalography, or EEG, and they offer a strong clue about how much neural activity is occurring when any particular picture is on the screen. (More on Time.com: I Don't Actually Hate Myself: Why Harvard Is Wrong About Bias)

The study found that, as expected, both Asian and white observers revealed what is called the "other-race effect": they took longer to recognize members of other races.

The authors controlled for differences in how the faces in the photos looked. It didn't matter whether someone was pretty or ugly, whether they were making a nice face or a rude one: it still took longer to recognize them if they were a member of another race.

What do these results mean? The authors are careful on this point. The idea that racism is built into our DNA is both unsavory and disappointing. Also, the sample is small: just 24 people. But the results suggest that we are programmed to see members of other races as, literally, different beings. The "'all-look-alike' perceptual experience," as the authors call it, is real. (More on Time.com: I Know the Truth, So Don't Bother Me With Facts)

These impulses are almost certainly evolutionary: we react against a member of another tribe that may be trying to annihilate us. One silver lining: understanding these impulses may help us to overcome them.

http://healthland.time.com/2010/11/24/they-all-look-the-same-how-racism-works-neurologically/

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荷爾蒙及性傾向研究的基本資訊
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荷爾蒙是一個一般性術語,包括許多具有特定功能的種類。影響性別、性別傾向、和/或與性別相關生理徵狀以及行為模式的荷爾蒙是其中的一種,通稱「性荷爾蒙」。基本資訊請見:

Hormone

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hormone

“A hormone (from Greek ρμή - "impetus") is a chemical released by a cell or a gland in one part of the body that sends out messages that affect cells in other parts of the organism.”

影響性別以及性別傾向的力量很多;包括先天生理因素和後天成長經驗。「性荷爾蒙」屬於前一個種類,而控制「性荷爾蒙」分泌數量及種類的因素又有每一個人的基因組合和大腦結構等等。到目前為止,科學家並沒有確切的研究成果,可以斷定那些因素具有決定性影響。但我們不能排除先天因素則無可置疑;而後天的教養/教育沒有能力完全改變生理因素的影響也無可置疑。就我所知,酗酒和好賭成癮的傾向,也多少受到基因組合和大腦結構的影響,總之,目前只有統計上的相關性而沒有定論。關於同性戀和生理因素相關性的研究資料很多。基本資訊請見:

http://www.narth.com/docs/bioresearch.html

The Biological Research on Homosexuality

http://www.heretical.com/wilson/hbrain.html

The Science of Sex: Glenn Wilson on Homosexuality and the Brain

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biology_and_sexual_orientation

Biology and sexual orientation



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荷爾蒙
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別忘記還有荷爾蒙這玩意兒!

最近同性戀流行, 希望這些傢伙也研究一下: 同性戀在腦袋裡如何產生?



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