Couples creating art or playing board games release more 'love hormone': Study
Couples
who play board
games or take a painting class together produce more
oxytocin or 'love
hormone', which is associated with bonding and family
cohesiveness, a study has found.
The
study, published in the Journal of Marriage and Family, found that
men wielding paintbrushes released twice as much or more oxytocin as
the level of women painters and couples playing games.
"We
were expecting the opposite -- that couples playing the board games
would interact more because they were communicating about the games
and strategies, or because they were competing, and with more
interaction, they would release more oxytocin," said Karen
Melton, an assistant professor at the Baylor University in the US.
Researchers
also expected that painting couples would be more attentive to the
instructor and to the canvas than to their partners -- but instead,
couples in the art class reported more partner-touching than those
playing board games.
"Typically,
an art class is not seen as an interactive date with your partner.
But sometimes couples that were painting turned the activity into a
bonding time by choosing to interact -- putting an arm around their
partner or simply saying, 'Good job,'" Melton said. Read
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