News Update Service
Thursday, January 8, 2009 : 0950 Hrs      
RSS Feeds


Sections
  • Top Stories
  • National
  • International
  • Regional
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Sci. & Tech.
  • Entertainment
  • Agri. & Commodities
  • Health

  • Index

  • Photo Gallery

    The Hindu
    Print Edition

  • Front Page
  • National
  • Tamil Nadu
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Karnataka
  • Kerala
  • Delhi
  • Other States
  • International
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Miscellaneous
  • Index

  • Magazine
  • Literary Review
  • Metro Plus
  • Business
  • Education Plus
  • Open Page
  • Book Review
  • SciTech
  • NXg
  • Entertainment
  • Cinema Plus
  • Young World
  • Property Plus
  • Quest

  • Sci. & Tech.
    Love potions for marriage counselling

    Ian Sample

    GUARDIAN NEWS SERVICE: Marriage counsellors may soon be taking a more Shakespearean approach tosolving troubles of the heart, by administering love potions to boost couples' feelings for one another, according to a leading scientist.

    Greater understanding of the brain chemistry of love has revealed hormones that could be given to couples to rekindle faded passions or diminish problematic feelings, says Larry Young, an expert in the neuroscience of social bonding at Emory University in Atlanta.

    Writing in the journal Nature, Young says scientists are close to reducing the mental state of love to a biochemical chain of events, paving the way for powerful new treatments for the lovelorn. Trials are already under way to see if offering hormones to warring couples improves on conventional marital therapy, he writes.

    Advances in genetics are also on course to transform relationships by making available tests to reveal how committed a prospective partner may be, he adds.

    Scientists have identified two hormones, oxytocin and vasopressin, which appear crucial in forming a close bond with another person. Tests in sheep found that an injection of oxytocin was enough to make a ewe form an immediate bond with lambs that were not her own.

    Men with a gene that makes them less responsive to vasopressin are less likely to marry their partners and more likely to have a marital crisis if they do, Young explains. The hormones are released in the brain during childbirth or sexual stimulation.

    "The view of love as an emergent property of a cocktail of ancient [brain chemicals] raises important issues for society. For one thing, drugs that manipulate brain systems at whim to enhance or diminish our love for another may not be far away."


    Sci. & Tech.






    Sections: Top Stories | National | International | Regional | Business | Sport | Sci. & Tech. | Entertainment | Agri. & Commodities | Health | Index
    The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Contacts | Subscription
    Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Business Line News Update | Sportstar | Frontline | Publications | eBooks | Images | Home

    Copyright © 2008, The Hindu. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu