作者mulkcs (mulkcs)
看板Cognitive
标题[新知] 吸引力的关键是理解
时间Wed Apr 6 22:14:07 2016
This Factor Is Key to Your Attractiveness
It has to do with your emotions
Humans are drawn to one another for countless reasons, and the fact that we’
re often drawn to people who seem to “get us” emotionally is now borne out
by a new study published in the journal PNAS: We are attracted to people
whose emotions we can easily understand—and that may be due in part to
matching neural circuitry.
“Being able to comprehend another person’s intentions and emotions is
essential for successful social interaction,” says study author Silke
Anders, a professor of Social and Affective Neuroscience at the University of
Lübeck. “To accomplish a common goal, partners must understand and
continuously update information about their partner’s current intentions and
motivation, anticipate the other’s behavior, and adapt their own behavior
accordingly.”
Anders and her fellow researchers wanted to learn whether there is a neural
mechanism that underlines a person’s ability to read another’s emotions and
become attracted to them. They had around 90 people watch video clips of
women who facially expressed fear or sadness. After watching the videos, the
people in the study were asked to judge how the women felt and asked how
confident they were that they were reading her right. The researchers also
measured the people’s brain activity through imaging.
They found that the more certain a person was about how a woman was feeling,
the more attracted they were to her. Higher levels of certainty and
attraction were also associated with more activity in the area of the brain
that processes rewards. This, the researchers say, suggests that the ability
to read someone successfully activates the brain’s reward system and spurs
attraction.
“What I believe makes our findings really exciting is the fact that
understanding and personal attraction seem to depend on both the sender’s
brain and the perceiver’s brain, and on how well they match,” says Anders.
“If the emotional signals sent by a sender—for example a facial expression
of fear or sadness—can efficiently be processed by the perceiver’s brain,
then their reward system will fire and they will feel attracted to the sender.
”
Anders says prior research has shown that the brains of people who have
difficulty understanding others’ emotions differ from people who are
particularly good at it. Differences in brain circuitry may be at least
partially responsible for missed connections in this study too. “If
communication does not work as smoothly as expected, this might not always
mean that sender or perceiver are not interested in communicating, it could
simply mean that the overlap of their neural vocabulary is not yet large
enough,” she says.
Whether emotional decoding and attraction can change if people work at it
remains unknown. The study size was small, so more research will be needed,
but Anders says she’d like to study how our understanding of others’
emotions changes over time, and whether the ability to successfully read
people emotionally can grow with experience.
http://time.com/4280521/what-causes-attraction/?xid=homepage
论文:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2016/03/30/1516191113
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大致上是说,我们是否被某人吸引,和我们是否能理解对方情绪有关。
论文之中提到一个新词汇"neural vocabulrary"是我们能否解读对方的重要关键。
有时候两人无法互相理解是neural vocabulrary的overlap太少之故。
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