Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Love Happens At Fourth Sight, Not First

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Oct, 2016 03:27 PM
    Love at first sight is a myth - and lovers need to meet at least four times before Cupid's arrow strikes their hearts, said a study.
     
    The findings showed that people often find themselves drawn to individuals after multiple encounters, even when there was no initial attraction.
     
    "Cupid's arrow is often slow to strike. It may be attributable to the gradual change in attractiveness from repetition," Ravi Thiruchselvam, Psychologist at Hamilton College in New York, was quoted as saying by dailystar.co.uk on Sunday.
     
    For the study, the team gave snaps of people's faces to a group of young men and women.
     
    The researchers then wired the participants brains to monitors as the group ranked the attractiveness of people in the pictures.
     
     
    The subjects were then shown the snaps for a second time, and rated those they found attractive much more highly.
     
    The attraction was even stronger on the third occasion and strongest of all on the fourth.
     
    The fourth attempt showed extra activity around the excitement and pleasure centres of the brain of the participants.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi met US President Barack Obama this afternoon in their eighth one-on-one interaction in the last two years.

    Haven't Been To Taj With Michelle Yet, Obama Tells PM Modi

    Oops. Pilot's Mistake Takes Air Asia X To Melbourne Instead Of Malaysia

    A Malaysia-bound AirAsia X plane which took off from Sydney ended up in Melbourne instead after the pilot entered the aircraft's wrong longitudinal position, safety officials revealed Wednesday.

    Oops. Pilot's Mistake Takes Air Asia X To Melbourne Instead Of Malaysia

    'Like A Girl' Is No More An Insult, Says New Survey

    'Like A Girl' Is No More An Insult, Says New Survey
    After winning performances by Indian women at the recently concluded Rio 2016 Olympics, the taunting phrase 'Like A Girl' is no more considered demeaning, a new survey has revealed.

    'Like A Girl' Is No More An Insult, Says New Survey

    Woman Named 'India' Ties The Knot, Says Proud Of Her Identity

    Woman Named 'India' Ties The Knot, Says Proud Of Her Identity
    A 24-year-old woman named 'India' by her late patriotic social worker father says she is proud of it even though she faces repeated queries from the inquisitive people she comes in contact with.

    Woman Named 'India' Ties The Knot, Says Proud Of Her Identity

    Mysterious Jurassic Sea Monster Unveiled

    Mysterious Jurassic Sea Monster Unveiled
    Move over, Nessie! A fierce predator - named the Storr Lochs Monster - that lived 170 million years ago has been unveiled for the first time, half a century after it was discovered.

    Mysterious Jurassic Sea Monster Unveiled

    Book Explores the Golden Age of Hollywood through its Famous Eateries

    Book Explores the Golden Age of Hollywood through its Famous Eateries
    Best-selling cookbook author and chef, George Geary, takes readers on a journey to where the rich and famous ate in the golden age of Hollywood in his new book, L.A.’S LEGENDARY RESTAURANTS

    Book Explores the Golden Age of Hollywood through its Famous Eateries