Biochemistry of Lust, Attraction and Attachment Flashcards
Lust
to seek sexual union with any appropriate member of the species
- predominant hormones are testosterone and estrogen
- basic human drive to procreate offspring
Attraction
select partners and focuses attention on genetically appropriate individuals, saving mating time and energy
- predominant hormones are dopamine, norepinephrine and serotonin
Attachment
sustain affiliative connections long enough to complete parental duties
- predominant hormones are vasopressin and oxytocin
Testosterone Functions
- for male pubertal development and aggression/competition
- increases sex drive
Estrogen Functions
- for female pubertal development
- learning/memory and brain development
- increases the release of BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) - important for neuron survival and growth
- increases sex drive
Norepinephrine Functions
- arousal, attention, concentration and learning
- kicks off fight or flight response
- causes increase glucose uptake and hyperfocus on the object of attraction, increasing attentiveness
Dopamine Functions
- functions are motor control, pleasure, reward, motivation, compulsion and perseveration
- importance for attraction in terms of sexual motivation and copulation
Serotonin Functions
- functions are mood, memory processing, sleep and cognition
- suppressed during attraction
- antidepressants that upregulate serotonin also decrease sex drive
Vasopressin Functions
- kidney function, scent marking, aggression, analgesia
- critical factor in the monogamous pair bonding of males
Oxytocin Functions
- functions include labour and lactation, maternal behaviours and prosocial behaviours
- critical factor in the monogamous pair bonding of females
Desire for Variety
Males - more partners = more offspring - more likely to pass genes to subsequent generations
Females - higher quality of output = more time and energy into offspring - increase access to resources to raise offspring
Gouldian Finch
- prefer to mate with birds that are genetically compatible
- having genetically incompatible mate increases female birds stress hormone levels
Chimpanzee Variety
- promiscuous mating with each other especially when there is greater access to food resources
- alpha males tend to father offspring more than non-alphas
Biological Roles of Vasopressin and Oxytocin
Oxytocin - Female pair bonding
- childbirth
- lactation
- maternal behaviour
Vasopressin - male pair bonding
- aggression
- analgesia
- territory marking
Allele 334
- changes expressions of vasopressin
- bonding scores were negatively correlated with allele 334
- experiences of marital crisis or threat of divorce was higher in people with one or two 334 alleles
- 0 or 1 allele were more likely to be married