Anthropologist discusses biology of love – The Daily Princetonian

Posted: Published on February 21st, 2017

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

People today are more likely to have sex earlier but wait longer to get married, biological anthropologist Dr. Helen Fisher said in a lecture on Feb. 20.

Were very well built to fall in love, for pair bonding and real sorrow in relationships, explained Fisher. A member of the Center for Human Evolutionary Studies in Rutgers Universitys Department of Anthropology, as well as chief scientific advisor of Match.com,Fisher talked about the science behind lovewhy we are attracted to one person instead of another, and how evolution shaped the biological processes behind human love.

She began her talk by saying that love is universal and that the phenomenon is comparable among people regardless of gender, age, or sexual orientation.

Contrary to what womens magazines may say, Fisher said men are more romantic than women. They fall in love more often and more quickly and are two-and-a-half times more likely to kill themselves when a relationship ends.

She explained that there were three basic brain systems that govern mating and reproduction: one for sex drive, one for romantic attraction, and the last for attachment.

I think all three of these brain systems evolved for different reasons, Fisher said.

The first gave our ancestors the instinctive drive for sex; the second, the ability to focus our energy on that one special someone; and the last, the capacity to tolerate someone and sticking with him or herat least long enough to raise a child, she said.

Once youre attracted to someone, everything about that person becomes sexy, even the way he gets on the bus, she added.

Fisher then explained the neuroscience behind love. A certain region of the brain becomes activated when one is in love, she said, and this region is the same that becomes activated in all ...substance addictions and behavioral addictions.

According to her, love is a wonderful addiction when its going well, and a horrible addiction when its not. Fisher added that she wouldnt be surprised if modern drugs hijacked the brain system developed for mating and love.

Continuing her examination of the evolutionary and anthropological origins of love, she described her hypothesis of how human romantic love evolved with human pair bonding.

Once our ancestors moved out of living in trees and started walking on two limbs instead of four, women couldnt carry both a baby the equivalent of a twenty-pound bowling ball and tools to perform the necessities of survival.

She began to need a mate to help her rear her young, at least through infancy, Fisher said.

On the other hand, men couldnt defend multiple women and their babies simultaneously. So, according to Fisher, our ancestors crossed the monogamy threshold at one point, and the circuitry for romantic love evolved.

Then, after examining the traditional factors behind what makes certain people likely to fall in love with each other, such as similarity in socioeconomic and ethnic background, education, and social values, Fisher asked ifbiology could be involved.

She explained that she has found four traits linked to biological systems, or four "brain systems, each one linked with a host of personality traits. These systems correspond to different levels of foursubstances in the body, namely dopamine, serotonin, testosterone, and estrogen/oxytocin.

Everyone has his or her own unique personality signature, a combination of different levels of these four systems. And those with dopamine- and serotonin-dominant personality signatures are attracted to others with similar personality signatures, while those with testosterone- and estrogen/oxytocin-dominant personality signatures are attracted to individuals of the other personality signature.

Wrapping up the talk, Fisher said were moving into ... an era of slow love. I think people today are terrified of divorce. Thus, she said, people take a long time before they get married, even though they have sex quite early on. She called the occurrence fast sex: slow love.

Marriage used to be the beginning of a relationship, [but] now its the finale, she said. Due to the longer time people are spending finding the right partner, she said that were going to move into a generation of much happier marriages.

The talk was titled The Science of Love. It was part of Conversations on Love, a student-organized series of talks on love, and it was held in Frist Campus Center at 4:30 on Feb. 20. Conversations on Love will be hosting more talks this week; the schedule is available on the groups Facebookpage.

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Anthropologist discusses biology of love - The Daily Princetonian

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