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Pastimes : THE SLIGHTLY MODERATED BOXING RING

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To: J. C. Dithers who wrote (10513)4/24/2002 10:43:58 AM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (2) of 21057
 
More Than a Pretty Face
by Jocelyn Selim

DISCOVER Vol. 23 No. 3 (March 2002)
discover.com

Beauty may be skin deep, but the response to an
enchantress—such as 1940s film star Veronica Lake,
above—runs all the way into the brain. Beautiful faces
may be downright addictive, according to neuroscientists
at Harvard's Massachusetts General Hospital.

The researchers recruited groups of heterosexual men in
their twenties and thirties and showed them a mix of male
and female faces flashed briefly on a computer screen.
The participants could keep a face visible longer by
pressing a button on a keyboard, something they did
repeatedly when they got to a picture of an attractive
female. "These guys were pressing the bar on average
6,000 times over 40 minutes," says Hans Breiter, who led
the study. "It was amazing, considering they were just
photographs—it's not as if there were beautiful women
waiting for them outside." A concurrent brain-scan study
showed that female faces trigger the same brain regions
activated by food and cocaine. Handsome male faces
provoked an opposite effect. "There was a definite
aversive response, similar to the one you see when you
burn your hand," Breiter says. He attributes these
responses to motivation circuitry in the brain that regards
beautiful females as rewards and handsome males as
competition. "The response happens in a primitive part of
the brain that's descended from the lizard. Thankfully, we
also possess higher brain regions that can regulate that
response," he says.
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