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Hey, Vsauce, Michael here.
Attachment of two people's lips kissing. The average person will spend about 20,160 minutes
of his, or her, life kissing. And the world record for the longest, continuous kiss is
58 hours, 35 minutes, and 58 seconds. But why do we kiss?
I mean, if you think about it, it seems kind of weird...right? I mean, sure, today kissing
represents peace, respect, passion, love. But, when the first two people in human history
kissed, were they just kind of being gross? Well, let's begin with what we do know: kissing
feels good, and it's good for you.
A passionate kiss burns about 2-3 calories per minute, and releases epinephryn and norepinephryn
into the blood, making your heart pump faster. Kissing, more often, is correlated with a
reduction of bad cholesteral and perceived stress- but, these positive effects didn't
become widespread by accident. Why did brains and bodies that love kissing become so common?
Well, a popular story holds it that Pacman's shape was inspired by the shape of a pizza
with a slice missing. But Toru Iwatani, the creator of Pacman, admitted that this was
only half-true. Pacman's shape was also inspired by rounding out the shape of the Japanese
character for "mouth." And it's mouths and Pacman's favorite activity, eating, which
again bring us closer to the heart of the kiss.
Evolutionary psychologists have argued that what we know today as "kissing" may have come
from "kiss-feeding": the exchange of pre-chewed food from one mouth to another. Mother birds
are famous for doing this, and many primates are frequently seen doing it as well. Not
that long ago, it was common between human mothers and their children. In fact, before
commercially produced, or DIY, baby-food instructions were readily available, it made a lot of sense.
Recently, Alicia Silverstone uploaded a clip of herself mouth feeding her child. It seemed
strange to some people, but even though, yeah, it exchanges saliva, which, like any contact
with an infant, can transfer pathogens, healthy mothers and healthy children can benefit from
the fact that kiss feeding provides nutrients: Carbohydrates, proteins, iron, and zinc, which
are not always available in breast milk. Plus, an adult saliva can help pre-digest the food,
making vitamins like B-12 easier for the baby to absorb.
So, mouth-to-mouth attachment has a history of intimacy, trust, and closeness. Your saliva
also carries information about who you are, your level of health, and, mucus membranes
in our mouth are permeable to hormones like testosterone, making a kiss a way to taste-test
a potential mate. A good kiss can be biological evidence that your kisser might be a good
mate.
So, as a strategy for mate selection, pre-historic people who enjoyed kissing, and did it more
often, may have made better decisions, picked better mates, reproduced more successfully,
and, eventually, become the norm- giving us...us. People who love kissing.
Any infant could have seen those benefits coming from a mile away, even though an infant's
vision isn't that great. From birth to four months, babies can only focus on things about
8-10 inches away from their face which, not surpisingly, is about the distance to their
mothers face while breast feeding.
So, faces, especially those looking right at us, tend to be the very first things in
our lives we can focus on and see clearly. This might explain why we are so good at detecting
faces. Humans are off the charts when it comes to this, in fact, we tend to see faces even
when there aren't any- it's called "pareidolia."
Because humans are so cooperative, it makes sense for us to be good at recognizing faces.
And, more importantly, detecting when someone is looking directly at us and clearly expressing
when we are looking at someone else.
A predator who lives by not being seen needs a gaze that's less obvious. In fact, research
has shown that our surprisingly white sclera's, the area that borders the iris, isn't just
an accident, but is a vital piece of human eye morphology that makes it easier for us
to ascertain the direction of someone else's gaze at a glance.
We also have impressive gaze-direction networks inside our brains containing individual neurons
that fire when someone is staring directly at us, but that stop firing if that gaze shifts
just a degree or two.
So, yeah, you can tell when you're being watched, we humans are quite sensitive to it, even
those of us with "Scopophobia": the fear of being stared at. But, to be sure, in order
for this to work, the other person's gaze must be within your line of sight- your field
of vision- that is, you can see them. Otherwise, if the stare is coming, say, from behind,
there is no evidence that people can tell they are being watched.
The "Psychic Staring Effect" falls within the realm of pseudo-science. No widely-accepted
studies have ever found evidence that it exists. Anecdotally, what's more likely is that the
very act of rubber-necking to see who's watching causes people to look up, and for your gazes
to attach.
But, what about attachment when no one is watching? One explanation for an infant's
love- attachment to their mother- doesn't involve vision or staring, but, instead, food.
The idea is that we love our mother's because as soon as we are born, they are a source
of life-sustaining nourishment. But, what if that nourishment came not from a loving
mother, but from a scary "Wire Mother"?
In the 1950's, Harry Harlow conducted a series of famous, but controversial, experiments
on monkeys at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Harlow's findings had substantial
implications on our understanding of attachment. But, by today's standards, his work would
largely be considered unethical. In one of his most famous experiments, Harlow separated
young monkeys from their mothers as soon as they were born and stuck them in cages with
two fake mothers: a soft one wrapped in cloth that did nothing, and a cold, mechanical mother
made of wire that, nonetheless, did provide food. But, despite being a cupboard mother,
the young baby monkey's didn't bond with her. When Harlow and his team scared the baby monkeys
with a strange contraption, the monkeys ran and clinged not to their wire source of life-sustaining
nourishment, but to the soft, cuddly, and otherwise useless cloth-mother.
This suggested that warmth and comfort was more important than food when it came to nurturing
attachment. Harlow also built a rejecting mother which used a blast of pressurized air
to push baby monkeys away. But, instead of finding another source of comfort, these monkeys
clung even tighter at all times than monkeys raised without rejecting mothers. And this
is what blows my mind: the instinct for warmth and comfort in newborn creatures is so strong
it not only resists attempts to frustrate it, but is paradoxically strengthened by it.
Eckhard Hess tested this by using electric shocks to discourage ducklings from following
the object they were imprinted on. But, it only strengthened the behavior and made them
follow more closely than ever before. The fact that a "wire mother," or a rejecting
mother, or receiving electric shocks for attaching to your mother, would cause more attachment,
more love, more dependence, seems like a paradox. But, paradoxes can teach us. As Oscar Wilde
put it, "a paradox is the truth standing on its head to attract attention."
And what gets our attention here is the effect uncertainty can have.
In 1955 A.E. Fisher conducted an experiment on puppies. His team separated puppies into
three groups. Members of the first group were treated kindly every time they approached
a researcher. Members of the second group were punished for approaching the researchers.
And puppies in the third group were randomly treated kindly, or punished. They grew up
never knowing what to expect. Their world was not a world of kindness or punishment,
but rather, one of uncertainty.
What's really chilling is that the study found that that group, the third group of puppies,
wound up being the most attached to the researchers. The third group loved the researchers the
strongest and was the most dependent upon them. Guy Murchie called this the "Polarity
Principle": "stress, including the mental stress of uncertainty, in an ingredient in
attachment or love and perhaps even manifestations of hatred (its polar opposite) somehow enhance
love."
Uncertainty, psychologically, can lead to some of the greatest feelings of attachment
and dependence. Good things, and bad things, in our lives often seem random and out of
our control. So, it's no surprise that we often react with blind love and acceptance
in the face of an unfair existence because, what else are we supposed to do? We are that
third group of puppies.
But, investigating uncertainty, conquering it so as to make the best decisions possible
is advantageous. So, over time, life has favored activities that turn uncertainty into knowledge.
Not every person out there is the best mate for you, but if it didn't matter which one
you picked, a kiss, a taste-test, wouldn't be necessary, and it wouldn't need to feel
so good or bring us so much pleasure.
So, go out there and kiss someone today. And, as always, thanks for watching.
By the way, tomorrow I am headed to the European Space Agency's Space Port in South America
with Euronews to watch a rocket launch in real life. Do you have any questions about
space or space travel today? Let me know in the comments below and I will ask the experts
your questions.