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  • Do you believe in love at first sight or should you restart this video until you find me attractive?

  • Hey loves, Julian here for DNews.

  • We all know that nauseating couple that just won't shut up about how they just met and

  • BOOM, they found eternal joy and happiness.

  • No one likes that couple.

  • If you don't know that couple, you're that couple.

  • Part of the problem with this idea of love at first sight is it sounds so implausible.

  • There's 7 billion people out there and you just glanced at someone and went, “Yep,

  • that's the one forever?”

  • Well, guess what killjoys, love happens faster than you think.

  • First of all let's talk about love.

  • What is love?

  • Baby don't hurt me.

  • Don't hurt me.

  • No more, sorry, couldn't resist.

  • Anyway there's a lot of different angles to tackle the question from but for our sake

  • let's just boil it down to chemicals in your brain.

  • Feelings of desire, emotional connection and bonding are facilitated by neurotransmitters

  • and hormones like dopamine, oxytocin, and vasopressin.

  • So how long does it take for this brain cocktail to start brewing?

  • Well back in 2010 Dr. Stephanie Ortigue, an assistant professor of psychology and neurology

  • at the University of Syracuse, conducted a meta-analysis of love research.

  • The study was published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine.

  • Ortigue and colleagues examined participants in fMRI machines and found that 12 areas of

  • your brain can start lighting up and slinging chemicals around within .2 seconds of slapping

  • eyes on someone.

  • But hold on,” the cynic in you says.

  • What if that's just lust, not love?”

  • Good point.

  • And my response is, “Neurologically, what's the difference?”

  • Well Ortigue's study tries to answer both those questions.

  • A lot of similar areas lit up for people who had fallen in love compared to people who

  • had fallen in lust, so for her it came down to whether they craved some sort of reward

  • right now, of if they thought more long term and abstractly about it.

  • People in love showed increased activity in areas associated with reward like the ventral

  • striatum, and parts of the brain associated with emotion like the amygdala, hypothalamus,

  • and the inferior parietal lobule.

  • Ortigue interprets that to mean that love is something that can grow out of lust, as

  • your brain adds complexity to a foundation that was built around achieving simple pleasant

  • physical satisfaction.

  • So if you experienced lust at first sight but now want to gush to your friends about

  • how you knew it was true love, you were close enough already that I say go ahead and modify

  • history a little bit.

  • Actually according to Dr. Donna Jo Bridge of Northwestern University, because we have

  • a tendency of inserting new information into our memories, you're probably doing that

  • already.

  • Love may or may not begin with a glance, but it is undeniable that every kiss begins with

  • Kay.

  • Look at the spelling, it's right there.

  • Kay Jewelers is one of our sponsors at Discovery Digital, they help keep the lights on and

  • the episodes coming, so if you want to thank them and score bonus points with that special

  • someone, go ahead and check out Kay's line of jewelry.

  • The brain is an amazing organ.

  • It starts firing in regular wave patterns 25 weeks after you're conceived and keeps

  • working right up until the moment you fall in love.

  • Alright it doesn't stop but it starts changing in some interesting ways.

  • Check out Trace's piece on that right here, you're going to love it.

  • So, love at first sight.

  • Do you believe in it?

  • Have you experienced it?

  • Lay your sappy love story on us in the comments, subscribe for more, and I'll see you next

  • time on DNews.

Do you believe in love at first sight or should you restart this video until you find me attractive?

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一目惚れの科学 (The Science Behind Love At First Sight)

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    Courtney Shih に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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