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Sunday, March 13, 2016

LOVE OR LUST? YOUR EYES COULD TELL YOU OUT!

LOVE OR LUST? YOUR EYES COULD TELL YOU OUT!by dgfpbd


What could two lovebirds gazing at each others eyes or attracted to each other’s body mean. A study has revealed that gazing at each others eyes indicates romantic love, while gazing at each others body indicates feelings of sexual desire.
Lead study author Stephanie Cacioppo, director of the University of Chicago High-Performance Electrical Neuro-imaging Laboratory, said in a statement that these telling glances can last in such a short time as half a second.
Cacioppo said that although little was known in terms of the science of first love, these eye gestures could provide the first clues towards unravelling this mystery and help use distinguish between feelings of love and feelings of desire towards strangers.
Cacioppo and her colleagues published a review in 2012 in the journal of sexual medicine that stated that feelings of romantic love and sexual desire activate different areas of the brain.
 
This new study was to examine whether researchers could identify feelings of love or lust based solely on eye tracking data.
In the first part of the study, 16 heterosexual students were shown 120 black and white pictures of heterosexual couples interacting with each other. In the second part, they were shown 40 pictures of attractive people of the opposite gender. The researchers did not use nude or erotic pictures on the participants.
In both cases, the researchers had to quickly report whether they felt feelings of love or lust after they looked at the pictures. Glances of love or lust took the same amount of time, indicating to the researchers that the brain takes approximately the same amount of time to process the same information.
However, analysis on eye tracking data revealed that those who looked at the people faces reported feelings of romantic love, while those who looked at their bodies reported feelings of sexual desire. This was the same for both men and women.
Eye tracking paradigm may open up new avenues for diagnosis for psychiatrists and clinicians and couple therapy said Co-author John Cacioppo, professor and director of the Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience at the University of Chicago.more dr able able of Bangladesh. More see-
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