Article - We Have Chemistry
Article - We Have Chemistry
Article - We Have Chemistry
process called love. Saying it is of the mind, that is mental, means from this perspective called interpersonal neurobiology which attempts to combine all disciplines of science into one perspective, that we must always seek both the embodied and the embedded nature of mind. Mind emerges in contexts internal regarding our physiology, and external in our being socially embedded. Embodied and embedded the mind is. Love as a mental process, Ill propose to you, emerges from a fundamental process called integration. Integration is the linkage of differentiated parts of a system. Integration leads to harmony; impaired integration leads to chaos and/or rigidity. Love is the harmony of integration. When we honour differences and promote compassionate linkages, love emerges. Love can thus arise in various relationships that involve attachment, romance, sexuality, learning, professional pursuits, athletics and spiritual communities. A relationship is dened in this model of interpersonal neurobiology as a pattern of shared energy and information ow. When these relationships are integrated, love emerges. The embodied brain responds to integrated relationships with the activation of integrative circuits ones that link widely separated regions to each other. For example, attachment relationships can be seen to promote the growth of integrative circuits in the prefrontal region, the hippocampus and the corpus callosum that co-ordinate and balance the nervous system (Siegel, 2012a,b). Therapeutic interventions that promote seeing the mind of another person mindsight with empathy and compassion offer integrative experiences that promote healing. Love is healing because love promotes integration. P
We have chemistry! the role of four primary temperament dimensions in mate choice and partner compatibility
Dr Helen Fisher approaches choice of mate from the perspective of biology, asserting that four neural systems are regularly associated with a constellation of personality traits
assionate love, obsessive love, being in love, whatever you wish to call it. Romantic love: a cross-cultural phenomenon. Love songs, poems, novels, plays, movies, operas, ballets, myths, legends: the world is littered with the artifacts of this human passion. It begins as the lover starts to regard another as special, unique. Engulfed in energy and ecstasy, the lover plunges into
Helen Fisher
despair at the slightest adversity. Physical separation or social barriers heighten their romantic passion, what I call frustration attraction . Many are willing to change their habits or beliefs, even die for this special other. The besotted thinks obsessively about him or her, known as intrusive thinking; and they crave emotional union with the beloved. Indeed, this passion arises from primitive brain pathways for wanting (Fisher et al, 2005, 2010). It is a drive a drive to pursue lifes greatest prize: a mating partner (Fisher, 2004).
And at the core of human romantic love is a profound preference for a particular individual; no one else will do.
References
Fisher H (2012). This volume. Siegel DJ (2012a). The developing mind [2nd ed]. New York: Guilford Press. Siegel DJ (2012b). Pocket guide to interpersonal neurobiology: an integrative handbook of the mind. New York: WW Norton. Siegel DJ (2010a). Mindsight: the new science of personal transformation. New York: Bantam/ Random House. Siegel DJ (2010b). The mindful therapist: a clinicians guide to mindsight and neural integration. New York: WW Norton. Wilson EO (1998). Consilience: the unity of knowledge. New York: Vintage.
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mother; or a mate who reects the values and interests of our childhood friends (See Pfaff and Fisher, 2012). But academics dont agree on the role of personality in mate choice. Some report we are attracted to those with similar personality traits; others conclude that opposites attract; still others maintain neither play a role. So I approached mate choice from a different perspective: biology. authority, orderliness, adherence to plans, methods and habits, self-control, precision, interest in details, conscientiousness, gural and numeric creativity, and religiosity. So I designated this trait constellation the cautious/social norm compliant temperament dimension and dubbed those particularly expressive of this suite of traits Builders. Prenatal endogenous testosterone priming is linked with enhanced visual-spatial perception and a keen understanding of rule-based systems, from mechanics to computers, maths, engineering or music. Those expressive of testosterone regularly exhibit acute attention to details and have deep but narrow interests. They also tend to be less socially aware, with poorer emotion recognition, less eye contact, less verbal uency, reduced empathy and extreme sensitivity to rank. Yet they are often self-condent, forthright, assertive and emotionally contained, although they also experience more emotional ooding, particularly rage. I designated this trait constellation the analytical/tough-minded temperament dimension and dubbed those particularly expressive of this trait constellation Directors. Prenatal endogenous oestrogen priming is associated with contextual, holistic and long-term thinking, as well as linguistic skills, agreeableness, co-operation, theory of mind (intuition), empathy and nurturing. Traits associated with oestrogen activities also include generosity and trust, the drive to make social attachments, heightened memory for emotional experiences, keen imagination and mental exibility. Oxytocin, closely related to oestrogen, is also associated with several prosocial traits, including trust, reading emotions in others and theory of mind. So I designated this trait constellation the prosocial/empathetic temperament dimension and dubbed those predominantly expressive of this suite of trait Negotiators.
degree to which they expressed each. Then, in a random sample of 28,128 heterosexual anonymous adults on the same dating website, I watched who chose whom to date. And because men and women often make up their minds about whether an individual is an appropriate long-term partner within the rst few minutes of meeting him or her (Sunnafrank and Ramirez, 2004), I felt an investigation of initial attraction was an appropriate focus for understanding a core aspect of mate choice, its beginning.
Mate choice
Men and women who were primarily novelty-seeking, energetic, curious and creative were statistically signicantly more drawn to those who shared these traits, while those who were primarily conventional, cautious and rule following were also drawn to individuals like themselves. But those who were more analytical, tough minded, direct and decisive were disproportionately attracted to their opposite, those who were imaginative, intuitive, compassionate and socially skilled; and vice versa. In short, Explorers preferentially sought Explorers, Builders sought other Builders, and Directors and Negotiators were drawn to one another. Why does similarity attract in some cases while opposites attract in others? Perhaps these human appetites are primordial reproductive mechanisms that evolved to insure the survival of the young. Take a partnership between a Director and a Negotiator.
The questionnaire
My nal questionnaire consisted of 56 statements. Data were collected using the US internet dating site, chemistry.com, until reliability was obtained in a US sample of 39,913 anonymous men and women. I then used eigen analysis on an additional set of 100,000 men and women. All individuals expressed all four temperament dimensions, yet individuals varied in the
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The theory of love
see all the angles, while the Director will be decisive. Moreover, the Director needs the Negotiators empathy, verbal acuity and people skills, while the Negotiator can marvel at the Directors candor, their goaloriented focus and their gift of knowing their own mind. Problems can emerge, however. Directors strive for efciency and logic, a trait that can disappoint the expressive, tenderhearted Negotiator. Directors dont like redundancy either; they are not likely to say I love you regularly or respond to other loving rituals the Negotiator needs to feel connected. Moreover, Directors admire self-control, so if the Negotiator becomes a drama queen (or king), the Director may retreat into hostile silence. The Director can also become impatient with the Negotiators intuitive side, regarding it as airy nonsense. Meanwhile, the Negotiator may nd the Directors insistence on tough-minded logic irritating, particularly if it tramples on someones feelings. But when the Director and Negotiator pool their complementary traits, they are likely to be an effective team for raising young.
I felt an investigation of initial attraction was an appropriate focus for understanding a core aspect of mate choice
Nevertheless, with two Builders, humanity has evolved another stable strategy for parenting.
competitive and have poorer people skills. Can two Negotiators ever make a decision? Both vacillate. And how will someone predominantly expressive of both Explorer and Builder traits cope with someone who is largely a Director and Negotiator? Every match will have different joys and sorrows (see Fisher, 2009). Moreover, each of us is a unique combination of these four broad biological styles of thinking and behaving. In fact, in my most recent study of 100,000 individuals, no two people answered these 56 questions the same way. Nevertheless, each of these 100,000 men and women expressed these four broad personality constellations in some way: biological patterns to human personality exist. So when a couple walks into the therapists ofce, they come not only with luggage from their childhood but with biologically based variations in whom and how they love. I believe these predispositions are worth knowing as the couple therapist embarks upon the journey into their clients hearts. P
References
Fisher HE (2012). Serial monogamy and clandestine adultery: evolution and consequences of the dual human reproductive strategy. In S Craig Roberts (ed). Applied evolutionary psychology. Cambridge University Press, pp139151. Fisher HE (2009). Why him? Why her? New York: Henry Holt. Fisher HE (2004). Why we love. New York: Henry Holt. Fisher H, Aron A and Brown LL (2005). Romantic love: an fMRI study of a neural mechanism for mate choice. Journal of Comparative Neurology, 493, pp5862. Fisher HE, Brown LL, Aron A, Strong G and Mashek D (2010). Reward, addiction, and emotion regulation systems associated with rejection in love. Journal of Neurophysiology, 104, pp5160. Fisher HE, Rich J, Island HD and Marchalik D (2010). The second to fourth digit ratio: a measure of two hormonally-based temperament dimensions. Personality and Individual Differences, 49(7), 773777. Pfaff D and Fisher HE (2012). Generalized brain arousal mechanisms and other biological, environmental and psychological mechanisms that contribute to libido. In A Fotopoulou, D Pfaff, MA Conway (eds). From the couch to the lab: trends in neuropsychoanalysis. Cambridge University Press, pp7786. Sunnafrank M and Ramirez A (2004). At rst sight: persistent relational effects of getacquainted conversations. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 21(3), pp361379.
Other matches
But what happens when an Explorer falls in love with a Builder? One is reckless, the other cautious; one likes novelty, the other basks in the familiar. Or when two Directors tie the knot? Both are sceptical,
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