The science behind love, one of our most disorienting and euphoric experiences, is stranger and more ancient than you might ...
You may have heard people say that the most important organ for love is the brain, not the heart. Research on the neuroscience of love has some interesting findings that might surprise you. When love ...
Love makes your brain release chemicals that make you feel happy and excited. Different parts of your brain are involved in feeling love, attraction, and attachment. The hypothalamus helps control ...
Love may feel mysterious, all-consuming, even transcendent, but cutting-edge neuroscience is beginning to show us that it is decidedly physical. Falling in love triggers brain chemistry, awakens ...
Source: John Graner, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, public domain "Love looks not with the eyes but with the mind" — William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream Can neuroscience, ...