by Katherine Wu
figures by Tito Adhikary

In 1993, Haddaway asked the world, “What is Love?” I’m not sure if he ever got his answer – but today, you can have yours.

Sort of.

Scientists in fields ranging from anthropology to neuroscience have been asking this same question (albeit less eloquently) for decades. It turns out the science behind love is both simpler and more complex than we might think.

Google the phrase “biology of love” and you’ll get answers that run the gamut of accuracy. Needless to say, the scientific basis of love is often sensationalized, and as with most science, we don’t know enough to draw firm conclusions about every piece of the puzzle. What we do know, however, is that much of love can be explained by chemistry. So, if there’s really a “formula” for love, what is it, and what does it mean?

Total Eclipse of the Brain

Think of the last time you ran into someone you find attractive. You may have stammered, your palms may have sweated; you may have said something incredibly asinine and tripped spectacularly while trying to saunter away (or is that just me?). And chances are, your heart was thudding in your chest. It’s no surprise that, for centuries, people thought love (and most other emotions, for that matter) arose from the heart. As it turns out, love is all about the brain – which, in turn, makes the rest of your body go haywire.

According to a team of scientists led by Dr. Helen Fisher at Rutgers, romantic love can be broken down into three categories: lust, attraction, and attachment. Each category is characterized by its own set of hormones stemming from the brain (Table 1).

Table 1: Love can be distilled into three categories: lust, attraction, and attachment. Though there are overlaps and subtleties to each, each type is characterized by its own set of hormones. Testosterone and estrogen drive lust; dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin create attraction; and oxytocin and vasopressin mediate attachment.
Table 1: Love can be distilled into three categories: lust, attraction, and attachment. Though there are overlaps and subtleties to each, each type is characterized by its own set of hormones. Testosterone and estrogen drive lust; dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin create attraction; and oxytocin and vasopressin mediate attachment.

Let’s Get Chemical

Lust is driven by the desire for sexual gratification. The evolutionary basis for this stems from our need to reproduce, a need shared among all living things. Through reproduction, organisms pass on their genes, and thus contribute to the perpetuation of their species.

The hypothalamus of the brain plays a big role in this, stimulating the production of the sex hormones testosterone and estrogen from the testes and ovaries (Figure 1). While these chemicals are often stereotyped as being “male” and “female,” respectively, both play a role in men and women. As it turns out, testosterone increases libido in just about everyone. The effects are less pronounced with estrogen, but some women report being more sexually motivated around the time they ovulate, when estrogen levels are highest.

Figure 1
Figure 1: A: The testes and ovaries secrete the sex hormones testosterone and estrogen, driving sexual desire. B and C: Dopamine, oxytocin, and vasopressin are all made in the hypothalamus, a region of the brain that controls many vital functions as well as emotion. D: Several of the regions of the brain that affect love. Lust and attraction shut off the prefrontal cortex of the brain, which includes rational behavior.

Love is its Own Reward

Meanwhile, attraction seems to be a distinct, though closely related, phenomenon. While we can certainly lust for someone we are attracted to, and vice versa, one can happen without the other. Attraction involves the brain pathways that control “reward” behavior (Figure 1), which partly explains why the first few weeks or months of a relationship can be so exhilarating and even all-consuming.

Dopamine, produced by the hypothalamus, is a particularly well-publicized player in the brain’s reward pathway – it’s released when we do things that feel good to us. In this case, these things include spending time with loved ones and having sex. High levels of dopamine and a related hormone, norepinephrine, are released during attraction. These chemicals make us giddy, energetic, and euphoric, even leading to decreased appetite and insomnia – which means you actually can be so “in love” that you can’t eat and can’t sleep. In fact, norepinephrine, also known as noradrenalin, may sound familiar because it plays a large role in the fight or flight response, which kicks into high gear when we’re stressed and keeps us alert. Brain scans of people in love have actually shown that the primary “reward” centers of the brain, including the ventral tegmental area and the caudate nucleus, fire like crazy when people are shown a photo of someone they are intensely attracted to, compared to when they are shown someone they feel neutral towards (like an old high school acquaintance).

Finally, attraction seems to lead to a reduction in serotonin, a hormone that’s known to be involved in appetite and mood. Interestingly, people who suffer from obsessive-compulsive disorder also have low levels of serotonin, leading scientists to speculate that this is what underlies the overpowering infatuation that characterizes the beginning stages of love.

The Friend Zone

Last but not least, attachment is the predominant factor in long-term relationships. While lust and attraction are pretty much exclusive to romantic entanglements, attachment mediates friendships, parent-infant bonding, social cordiality, and many other intimacies as well. The two primary hormones here appear to be oxytocin and vasopressin (Figure 1).

Oxytocin is often nicknamed “cuddle hormone” for this reason. Like dopamine, oxytocin is produced by the hypothalamus and released in large quantities during sex, breastfeeding, and childbirth. This may seem like a very strange assortment of activities – not all of which are necessarily enjoyable – but the common factor here is that all of these events are precursors to bonding. It also makes it pretty clear why having separate areas for attachment, lust, and attraction is important: we are attached to our immediate family, but those other emotions have no business there (and let’s just say people who have muddled this up don’t have the best track record).

Love Hurts

This all paints quite the rosy picture of love: hormones are released, making us feel good, rewarded, and close to our romantic partners. But that can’t be the whole story: love is often accompanied by jealousy, erratic behavior, and irrationality, along with a host of other less-than-positive emotions and moods. It seems that our friendly cohort of hormones is also responsible for the downsides of love.

Dopamine, for instance, is the hormone responsible for the vast majority of the brain’s reward pathway – and that means controlling both the good and the bad. We experience surges of dopamine for our virtues and our vices. In fact, the dopamine pathway is particularly well studied when it comes to addiction. The same regions that light up when we’re feeling attraction light up when drug addicts take cocaine and when we binge eat sweets. For example, cocaine maintains dopamine signaling for much longer than usual, leading to a temporary “high.” In a way, attraction is much like an addiction to another human being. Similarly, the same brain regions light up when we become addicted to material goods as when we become emotionally dependent on our partners (Figure 2). And addicts going into withdrawal are not unlike love-struck people craving the company of someone they cannot see.

Figure 2: Dopamine, which runs the reward pathways in our brain, is great in moderate doses, helping us enjoy food, exciting events, and relationships. However, we can push the dopamine pathway too far when we become addicted to food or drugs. Similarly, too much dopamine in a relationship can underlie unhealthy emotional dependence on our partners. And while healthy levels of oxytocin help us bond and feel warm and fuzzy towards our companions, elevated oxytocin can also fuel prejudice.

The story is somewhat similar for oxytocin: too much of a good thing can be bad. Recent studies on party drugs such as MDMA and GHB shows that oxytocin may be the hormone behind the feel-good, sociable effects these chemicals produce. These positive feelings are taken to an extreme in this case, causing the user to dissociate from his or her environment and act wildly and recklessly. Furthermore, oxytocin’s role as a “bonding” hormone appears to help reinforce the positive feelings we already feel towards the people we love. That is, as we become more attached to our families, friends, and significant others, oxytocin is working in the background, reminding us why we like these people and increasing our affection for them. While this may be a good things for monogamy, such associations are not always positive. For example, oxytocin has also been suggested to play a role in ethnocentrism, increasing our love for people in our already-established cultural groups and making those unlike us seem more foreign (Figure 2). Thus, like dopamine, oxytocin can be a bit of a double-edged sword.

And finally, what would love be without embarrassment? Sexual arousal (but not necessarily attachment) appears to turn off regions in our brain that regulate critical thinking, self-awareness, and rational behavior, including parts of the prefrontal cortex (Figure 2). In short, love makes us dumb. Have you ever done something when you were in love that you later regretted? Maybe not. I’d ask a certain star-crossed Shakespearean couple, but it’s a little late for them.

So, in short, there is sort of a “formula” for love. However, it’s a work in progress, and there are many questions left unanswered. And, as we’ve realized by now, it’s not just the hormone side of the equation that’s complicated. Love can be both the best and worst thing for you – it can be the thing that gets us up in the morning, or what makes us never want to wake up again. I’m not sure I could define “love” for you if I kept you here for another ten thousand pages.

In the end, everyone is capable of defining love for themselves. And, for better or for worse, if it’s all hormones, maybe each of us can have “chemistry” with just about anyone. But whether or not it goes further is still up to the rest of you.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Katherine Wu is a third-year graduate student at Harvard University. She loves science with all of her brain.

Further Reading

  1. For a long-form human interest story on love, see National Geographic’s coverage of “True Love”
  2. For a very in-depth (and well-done!) introduction to the brain and its many, many chemicals, check out the NIH’s Brain Basics page
  3. For the New York Times’ take on falling in love with anyone, ask these 36 questions

238 thoughts on “Love, Actually: The science behind lust, attraction, and companionship

  1. Thank you for this article. I really thought it would be an amazing read. But while I enjoyed it, I also hate it for the simple fact that one very important component is missing in all this: the mention of endogenous opioids. It is endogenous opioid withdrawal what causes us to miss someone. As we (currently) know, there are three types of endogenous opioids – the one that modulates our sociality is known as beta-endorphins (or simply endorphins). I cannot believe that this isn’t included in this otherwise wonderful article. And what about PEA (phenylethylamine) – the chemical that is involved in us falling in love?

    I am not a neuroscientist of any kind. I am a (part-time) canine professional who is very actively exploring the worlds of Affective Neuroscience, Social Neuroscience and Neuroscience to advance a program I have created together with a brilliant dog trainer. The name of the program is Affective Dog Behavior. Understanding the brain is vital for us to improve the program and keep it going. Thus, I read as much as I possibly can. Finding this article was incredibly encouraging … noticing that endogenous opioids weren’t mentioned even once was incredibly discouraging.

    I realize that there is a very negative stigma attached to the term “opioids”. That stigma appears to be the reason why we insist on using the term “endorphins” rather than “endogenous opioids”. And that same stigma appears to be the reason why the public still doesn’t realize our brain produces opioids or cannabinoids, etc. How are we ever supposed to win the fight against addiction, if we are so crazy afraid of educating the public?

    Anyway, if you read this, this article is NOT enough to explain “Love Actually”. Also, Oxytocin, while involved in the bonding process, is misrepresented: Oxytocin has many functions; one of the major jobs of Oxytocin is to boost confidence, another one is to inhibit the brain from building a tolerance to endogenous opioids.

    Just my two cents.

  2. Hi Katherine, loved this article! I’ve been trying to understand why people develop feelings for someone.
    So lust can be one sided while attraction usually happens when both parties show interest in each other right? Does attraction develop when you become physically close to someone you’re attracted to (eg. holding hands) and share a believed trust for each other?
    Coz obviously there are cases where you can be physically close to but not develop feelings (or feelings of dopamine)…

  3. Oxytocin can be made at a compounding pharmacy. Dr. Fisher concluded love is drive, a kind of deep neurological “itch”, and the drive to give love is stronger than the one to receive it. The constant state of craving to receive love is entangled with wanting to give it. To have your love received by another gives us deeper satisfaction. Its a reciprocal process when it works well. But if your giving is not received, the pain of rejection results in love’s “wound” that you and I and many others have experienced. These wounds never bleed but cause such intense emotional pain that one often withdraws from the process entirely. The brain has deep layered memory of these wounds. Optimally these places in memory are triggered as a warning when you get into a similar situation, causing a more cautious approach and hopefully avoiding another “trainwreck love”. Heart surgeons see scarred tissue on the outside of the heart that results after bad divorces, breakups and heartbreaks. Google Broken Heart Syndrome. Deaths have even been linked to this. Conclusion: Loving carelessly is dangerous to your health… if not deadly. Choosing wisely with good judgement using the PFC, is the smart thing to do. When the limbic hijack happens in states of sensual excitement and sexual bliss, sound analytical processes get thrown out. Are you willing to gamble your life?

  4. Love ourselves first . Coz, which gives the true person and it produce oxytocin at the right time. Also the important fact, every person get breakdown in first love Or lust. Which shows a best 💯 way to be a professional human , loyalty and you’ll know intensive of the relationship..

  5. This is a fascinating explanation. I found this article while trying to rationalise some (unexpected) feelings of attachment that I’ve been experiencing.

    To give some context, I’ve spent a lot of time working closely with a colleague recently, and whilst I’ve openly admitted to having a degree of attraction to her, common sense dictated that I needed to (successfully, I might add!) manage the attraction – and perhaps a degree of lust too. But for the past few days, I’ve not been able to see the aforementioned friend, and have been missing her a lot… way too much in fact, and it caught me completely by surprise!

    I’ve worked out that the onset of the feelings of anxiety, insecurity and ‘missing her’ coincided with when I stopped taking a vitamin supplement. Having found a few papers on the subject, I’m now of the opinion that taking the supplement was supporting the synthesis of certain hormones – perhaps Serotonin, Dopamine and/or Oxytocin. This actually comes as something of a relief – and I’ve re-stocked to see if this has any effect on these ‘feelings’.

    I’m not a scientist myself, but conducting a study on my own biological functions will be a welcome distraction from the pandemic!

  6. So let me get this straight, the neural chemicals in my head are all I need to love someone. That person’s personality and actions don’t matter, I will just automatically love them and they’ll automatically love me right

    First of all your science on oxytocin is far behind it’s shameful start reading up on it it is not the super cuddle love hormone that is all trite and it a major player in the replication crisis. I keep forgetting though the truth of oxytocin doesn’t sell shit however it being the all powerful love hormone that causes people to stay together does

    Second of all Does this crappy science replace all the trials and tribulations of couples trying to stay together, it’s just a shot of dopamine/oxytocin, a DaSh Of SeRiToNiN in your head, not the fact that you’re trying hard to keep things together, your personality does it matter it’s a Neuropeptide in my brain that’s what matters

    This is reductionistic hogwash, if you think any of these chemicals react or do anything without the other individual or the personality playing a part you’re absolutely insane

    None of this was helpful it was just more of the same reductionistic crap that you hear from Helen Fisher whom got divorced in 2004 and has based her entire career and minimizing love down to its chemical components thats not science That’s obsessive biased

    But when I come home tonight I’m gonna walk up to my wife and tell her that the only reason why I love hers because of neural peptides in my brain and that all the hard work we did to keep a relationship together over the last 17 years was actually the result of my dopamine fix

    This is why I hate science it doesn’t seek the truth it’s seeks to control

    1. no lol. you’re trying way too hard to sound smart and it’s not even working.
      p.s: look up straw man fallacy

  7. As I think, LOVE shouldn’t be bound to the bound to the boundaries of just chemical activities or some english vocabulary…
    As I experience, LOVE is not the boundation for us like lust, attachment or attraction… It’s the connection or compatibility of inner vibrations with the world.

  8. To say that reproduction is the evolutionary basis of lust is just inaccurate. Reproduction does not drive lust. Men are not attracted to women because of reproduction and vice versa. This is heteronormative nonsense that has been perpetuated by heteronormative and the illogical religious beliefs that established the foundations of social norms. People for decades have given into tht ridiculous notion. Lust and reproduction are not the same thing and are not related. A man doesnt even have to touch a woman in order to get her pregnant. Heterosexual activity does not HAVE to happen in order for a baby to be produced nor do you need people to be heterosexual in order to take care of and raise offspring.

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