MIAMI, July 11, 2019 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- A broad
national online public opinion service LoveRelationScience.com
launches focusing on love and relationships in the world of
technology and social media with published social scientist
scientific studies.
Sample survey questions: Do you believe in love at first sight?
Are you in love? Sexual behavior is sex better with no strings
attached? Is a woman attracted to a man's smell? Is a man attracted
to a women's smell? Recently Engaged. What are your expectations?
How to achieve happiness and contentment in marriage? Ever had an
extra-marital affair? Is it ethical to be involved in an
extra-marital
relationship?
There is such a thing as love at first sight, according to a
recent study from the University of
Colorado. It's called physiological synchrony. A team of
researchers at the school's Anschutz Medical Campus says that
mutual changes in autonomic nervous systems of two people can cause
the effect.
The study examined what type of social interaction is required
for two people to display physiological synchrony, or what is
basically an immediate mutual attraction. The study also examined
whether the levels of autonomic attraction people share predicts
affiliation and friendship. The findings were published in Nature
Science Reports.
"In a variety of situations, people appear more social with one
another when their autonomic nervous systems are in sync. However,
this is the first study to show that, although people display
physiological synchrony across social contexts, how much arousal
people share can vary, differentially impacting social outcomes
like perceived similarity and friendship interest," said
Chad Danyluck, Ph.D., a postdoctoral
fellow at the Colorado School of Public Health.
The findings show that sharing similar amounts of sympathetic
arousal was enough to increase perceptions of similarity – a
precursor to friendship – regardless of social context and no
matter the arousal levels partners shared.
One possible explanation for these findings is that patterns of
sympathetic arousal may correlate with observable body movements
(and by extension a lack of arousal may correlate with a lack of
body movement) that might predict perceived similarity if shared
among partners.
The study comes at a time when advertisements for
attraction-adding supplements are at an all-time high. Love
Relation Science also has a product that is a highly amazing
nutritious supplement, which has several all-natural ingredients
that can stimulate the body's energy system.
Using data from 134 people who did not know each other before
the activity, the study seemed to show that people to have a
physical reaction to each other in social settings.
Source: University of Colorado
Anschutz Medical Campus. "How arousal impacts physiological
synchrony in relationships." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily,
19 June 2019.
SOURCE Love Relationship Science