Do you know that your body plays a significant role when you are falling in love with somebody? Or that it helps strengthen your bond with your special someone?
The chemistry of love is the subject of the latest episode of the American Chemical Society's Reactions YouTube series.
The video explains how feel-good neurotransmitters like dopamine and oxytocin fuel lifelong pair bonds in prairie voles, which - along with humans - are the mammalian kingdom's leading monogamists.
If you block oxytocin receptors, you can totally cut off that pair-bonding response, Abigail Marsh, associate professor of psychology at Georgetown University, explained.
Marsh asserted that people who excite romantic feelings in us also probably trigger increases in oxytocin, which results in an increase in dopamine, and then we find that person to be someone we want to stick with.
In the video, Marsh also explains that addictive drugs affect the brain in ways similar to love - which helps explain the painful, withdrawal-like symptoms of heartbreak.