Expert Article - Love On the Brain
“I hate to break it to you but what people call ‘love’
is just a chemical reaction that compels animals to breed” – Rick from Rick and
Morty.
Have you ever been rejected by someone you love? If your
answer is yes, then you know that love can hurt more than any physical wound.
However, it may comfort you to know that you stand in the majority. When Helen
Fisher asked this question in a study among college students, almost 90%
responded affirmatively (The Brain in Love). Romantic love is a universal
affliction that has existed in every known human society. It has inspired art,
poetry, and wars. But what is love exactly? An evolutionary trick to motivate
us to procreate? The consequence of Zeus ripping us apart so we are forever
cursed to search for our other half? Scientific research suggests that love is actually
just chemistry, and can be broken down into three components—lust, attraction,
and attachment (Wu).
Lust
Lust is the component that stems from our evolutionary need
to reproduce. The brain’s hypothalamus is responsible for creating the
chemicals of lust: testosterone and estrogen. Testosterone, while generally
perceived as a male hormone, can increase libido in both men and women. Women
have also reported being more sexually motivated around ovulation, when
estrogen levels are at their highest (Wu). However, anyone who has experienced
love can tell you that lust and love are not the same. Testosterone and
estrogen can’t explain the emotional intensity of being in love, or the
gut-wrenching pain of love ending. These experiences can be accounted for by
attraction and attachment.
Attraction
Many
people see love as an emotion, or a constellation of emotions ranging from joy
to despair. But as it turns out, love actually derives from a more primal core
of our brain: the reward system. This means attraction is more of a
goal-oriented drive than an emotion. When researchers used fMRI to study the
brain activity of subjects who were described as “passionately in love”, they
found high levels of activity in the Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA), which
produces dopamine and disperses it to several areas in the brain (Fisher).
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that is known as a chemical of pleasure, and is
essential to reward-motivated behaviors. When our reward centers are engaged, our
brains can become addicted and dependent on the stimulation. Eating chocolate,
doing cocaine, and being in love are all activities that trigger dopamine production—and
are potentially addictive.
In fact, in a study conducted on recently romantically
rejected individuals, they found similar brain activity between those subjects
and individuals recovering from cocaine withdrawal. Specifically, three main
areas were stimulated:
·
The VTA, responsible for motivation and reward.
·
The nucleous accumbens and frontal cortexes,
associated with craving and addiction.
·
The insular cortex and anterior cingulate,
associated with physical pain and distress (Nauert).
The addictive attributes of romantic love may explain the
all-consuming nature of heartbreak.
When we fall in love, chemicals from the reward circuit
flood our brain, producing a variety of physical and emotional responses. This
is partly due to cortisol, the stress hormone, which also increases at the
inception of romantic love (Edwards). The rise in cortisol levels depletes our
serotonin, a chemical that is considered a natural mood stabilizer. Serotonin
is known to help with eating, sleeping, reducing depression, and regulating
anxiety. This may explain why love can cause appetite suppression and insomnia.
Additionally, low levels of serotonin are also found in people who suffer from
obsessive-compulsive disorder, which may relate to the obsessive and manic
qualities of passionate love (Wu).
In one study, researchers examined the brain activity of
subjects who were shown pictures of their loved partners. They found that an
increase of activity in the brain’s romantic zones decreased activity in the
amygdala and the frontal cortex. The amygdala is responsible for fear, and its
deactivation implies a lessening of fear. The frontal cortex is responsible for
enforcing judgmental criteria when we interact with people, and its
deactivation indicates a lack of judgment (Zeki). Hence the adage, “love is
blind”.
Attachment
While the chemicals of attraction may explain how we fall in
love, why do we stay in love? This can be explained by attachment, which is
driven by oxytocin. Oxytocin is frequently referred to as “the love hormone”,
and induces feelings of content, calmness, and security. It plays a role in
bonding through physical contact, and is released in large quantities during
breastfeeding, childbirth, and sexual activity (Wu).
Oxytocin was first studied in prairie voles, an animal that
mates for life. When the hormone is released during sex, it forges a bond
between the male and the female. The prairie voles’ cousin, the Montana vole,
does not share this brain circuitry and does not live a monogamous lifestyle. However,
describing oxytocin as a love hormone is overly simplistic. In fact, oxytocin
can be responsible for negative reactions such as jealousy, envy, and suspicion.
In one study, men who were securely attached to their mothers described them
more fondly after an oxytocin boost, but those with troubled relationships were
even more critical with more oxytocin (Pappas). It may be that oxytocin simply
amplifies social environments that already exist.
It is interesting to note that oxytocin can affect men and
women in different ways. During sex, the woman produces large amounts of
oxytocin that make them feel bonded during the interaction. For men, however,
testosterone is produced, which inhibits oxytocin. Instead, men mostly get a
rush of dopamine and pleasure, which can overshadow any feelings of affection.
This could explain why women tend to get more emotionally attached through
sexual intercourse (How Your Brain).
The Love Formula?
Although science has helped us gain a better understanding
of what happens in our brains when we fall in love and get attached, we still
don’t have an exact formula for figuring out love. We can’t control who our
brain chooses to be attracted to, and we can’t control when people aren’t
attracted to us. Maybe the best lesson we can learn from this is to be kinder
to ourselves. The next time you get rejected just remember, it’s not you it’s
the chemicals.
Works Cited
Edwards, Scott. “Love and
the Brain.” On the Brain, Harvard Mahoney Neuroscience Institute,
Mar. 2015,
neuro.hms.harvard.edu/harvard-mahoney-neuroscience-institute/brain-newsletter/and-brain-series/love-and-brain.
Fisher, Helen E et al.
“Intense, Passionate, Romantic Love: A Natural Addiction? How the Fields That
Investigate Romance and Substance Abuse Can Inform Each Other” Frontiers
in psychology vol. 7 687. 10 May. 2016, doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00687
“How Your Brain Falls In
Love.” Performance by Dawn Maslar, TED, YouTube, 5 July 2016, www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyq2Wo4eUDg.
Nauert, Rick. “Romantic
Breakup Similar to Overcoming Addiction.” Psych Central, Psych
Central.com, 8 Aug. 2018,
psychcentral.com/news/2010/07/26/romantic-breakup-similar-to-overcoming-addiction/16019.html.
Pappas, Stephanie. “Love
Drug? Oxytocin's Tender Effects Questioned.” LiveScience, Future
Plc, 11 Feb. 2011,
www.livescience.com/12833-love-hormone-oxytocin-dark-side.html.
“The Brain In Love.”
Performance by Helen Fisher, TED, YouTube, 15 July 2008, www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYfoGTIG7pY&t=297s.
Wu, Katherine. “Love,
Actually: The Science behind Lust, Attraction, and Companionship.” Science
in the News, Harvard University, 14 Feb. 2017,
sitn.hms.harvard.edu/flash/2017/love-actually-science-behind-lust-attraction-companionship.
Zeki, Semir. “The
Neurobiology of Love.” FEBS Letters, vol. 581, no. 14, 2007, pp.
2575–2579., doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2007.03.094.



This was definitely an interesting perspective on love and its affects on the brain. I found that oxytocin is released in women most often when they have children and sex, while in men its released more when they have children. In other words, that oxytocin bond of love is far more prominent in women when they engage in intercourse.
ReplyDeleteI appreciated the last paragraph, because as much as we try to explain love with science and data it's extremely difficult if not impossible to fully understand and characterize.
Really cool expert article! I really liked how you talked about all the different hormones that are involved with lust, attraction, and attachment. I think you also did a really nice job explaining the three components. I had no idea that all three of these were going on when someone "falls in love." Great title and an awesome quote (I totally read it in Justin Roiland's voice)
ReplyDeleteI like how you break down love into three distinct categories and explain each of them in depth. My favorite section is the paragraph on attraction because now I know what's going on in my Ventral Tegmental Area (VTA) when I am experiencing this sort of emotion. I also think you did a good job of separating each paragraph so that they are easy to read.
ReplyDelete-Ryan Baer