19 July 2013

PSYCHOLOGY - Why talking about yourself with friends can be as pleasurable as SEX



















Why talking about yourself with friends can be as pleasurable as SEX


  • -  Research finds that talking about yourself triggers changes in the brain 
  • -  Changes are similar to those that occur during sex or when eating food
  • -  This sensation is increased when the conversations are with friends


According to recent figures people spend up to 40 per cent of their time talking about themselves.

Researchers from Harvard University Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Lab wanted to find out why people like the sound of their own voice so much and if it was linked to the parts of their brain associated with pleasure and reward. 

After conducting tests using brain scanning technology they found that when people talk about themselves it triggers the same chemical reaction they experience during sex and this motivates them to share personal information more regularly. 


Neurologists from Harvard University have discovered people like talking about themselves because it makes them feel good.
Neurologists from Harvard University have discovered people like talking about themselves because it makes them feel good. Changes in the brain when someone discusses personal matters are similar to changes that occur during sex and discussing personal information with friends increases this sensation


WHAT IS DOPAMINE?

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that helps control the brain's reward and pleasure sections. 
It is released when the brain is subjected by certain stimuli, such as during sex, when taking drugs, eating chocolate and more. 
Dopamine also helps control emotional responses to situations. 
It helps us to see the rewards of certain behaviours but also motivates us to seek out these rewards.
Dopamine deficiency results in Parkinson's Disease, and people with low dopamine activity may be more prone to addiction. 
The presence of a certain kind of dopamine is also associated with sensation seeking.  
Sensation seeking is a personality trait in people who seek out risky activities.
The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to carry out the tests.

    This imaging tool can identify changes in the level of blood flow to certain parts of the brain when presented with certain stimuli. 

    During the fMRI experiment, researchers asked 195 people to talk about themselves, including their own opinions and personality traits.

    They were then asked to discuss opinions and traits of other people they knew. 

    The researchers measured the blood flow levels in the participant's brains during both discussions and used them to directly compare differences in neural activity between the two. 

    When participants talked about themselves, the researchers discovered an increase in activity to the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), generally linked with self-related thought. 

    And for the first time they noticed a change in activity in the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and the ventral tegmental area (VTA). 

    Both parts of these brain are linked with releasing dopamine.


    During the fMRI experiment, 195 people were asked to talk about themselves and about other people.
    During the fMRI experiment, 195 people were asked to talk about themselves and about other people. Researchers measured the blood flow levels in the participant's brains. When the participants talked about themselves, the researchers discovered an increase in the areas of the brain associated with reward, pictured


    Dopamine is the chemical that controls the brain's reward and pleasure systems.

    These areas of the brain have previously been linked to the pleasure felt during sex, when taking cocaine or eating sweet and flavourful food, for example. 

    The researchers conclude that the findings prove talking about yourself may be 'inherently pleasurable'.

    This makes people want to seek out these pleasurable feelings, which motivates them to talk about themselves more regularly. 

    In a second experiment, the researchers wanted to test whether having someone they knew to talk to, such as a friend or relative, would sway these results. 


    During a second experiment participants had to answer questions about themselves and other people and these answers could then either be shared or kept private.
    During a second experiment participants had to answer questions about themselves and other people and these answers could then either be shared or kept private. When the answers were shared, the brain activity increased further, pictured


    As in the first study, participants were asked questions about themselves and about others.

    This time they were told their responses would be shared with the people they had brought with them or kept private.
    Although the self-focused answers resulted in an increase in brain activity again, those which were shared created a higher level of activity than those that were kept private. 

    This showed that talking about yourself is pleasurable, but talking about yourself to someone else increases this pleasure.

    Commenting on the findings, psychology PHD Adrian Ward said: 'You may like to talk about yourself simply because it feels good—because self-disclosure produces a burst of activity in neural regions associated with pleasure, motivation, and reward.  

    'But, in this case, feeling good may be no more than a means to an end—it may be the immediate reward that jump-starts a cycle of self-sharing, ultimately leading to wide varieties of long-term benefits.'

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