Morning Overview on MSN
Brain scans reveal how long term love rewires your reward center
Romantic love is often described as a feeling, but brain imaging suggests it is also a long running neural project that ...
PsyPost on MSN
The surprising way the brain’s dopamine-rich reward center adapts as a romance matures
A new study published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience provides evidence that the human brain processes romantic partners differently than close friends, specifically within ...
April 25 -- THURSDAY, April 24 (HealthDay News) -- Your brain may be telling you to be nice because it will pay off -- financially or socially, says a new study. Japanese researchers using functional ...
"I Think We're Alone Now," from the visual journals of Cathy Malchiodi, PhD © 2018 Source: ©2018 Cathy Malchiodi, PhD Like many psychotherapists who include music ...
A small region of the brain, known as the ventral tegmental area (VTA), plays a key role in how we process rewards. It produces dopamine, a neuromodulator that helps predict future rewards based on ...
The first study to investigate how dog brains process speech shows that our best friends in the animal kingdom care about both what we say and how we say it. Dogs, like people, use the left hemisphere ...
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