Topic Areas:KeynoteCategory:Couples Conference | is Archive: Couples Conference 2005Faculty:Helen E. Fisher, PhDDuration:1:02:24Format:Audio OnlyOriginal Program Date :Mar 05, 2005 Description Description: Anthropologist Helen Fisher discusses the brain networks associated with romantic love to explain frustration attraction, abandonment rage, the despair response, love addiction, stalking, love suicide and other phenomena associated with romantic rejection..
Archive: Topic Areas:KeynoteCategory:Couples Conference | Couples Conference 2005Faculty:Helen E. Fisher, PhDDuration:1:02:24Format:Audio OnlyOriginal Program Date :Mar 05, 2005 Description Description: Anthropologist Helen Fisher discusses the brain networks associated with romantic love to explain frustration attraction, abandonment rage, the despair response, love addiction, stalking, love suicide and other phenomena associated with romantic rejection.
She is concludes that long term use of serotonin-enhancing antidepressants can jeopardize romantic love and attachment to a mate..
She concludes that long term use of serotonin-enhancing antidepressants can jeopardize romantic love and attachment to a mate.
Educational Objectives: is To name the three primary brain systems for mating and reproduction..
Educational Objectives: To name the three primary brain systems for mating and reproduction.
serotonin-enhancing antidepressants is To describe how can affect brain pathways to jeopardize feeling of romance and attachment..
To describe how serotonin-enhancing antidepressants can affect brain pathways to jeopardize feeling of romance and attachment.
*Sessions is may be edited for content and to preserve confidentiality* Faculty Helen E. Fisher, PhD Related seminars and products: 19 Helen E. Fisher, PhD, is a biological anthropologist and a Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Rutgers University..
*Sessions may be edited for content and to preserve confidentiality* Faculty Helen E. Fisher, PhD Related seminars and products: 19 Helen E. Fisher, PhD, is a biological anthropologist and a Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Rutgers University.
She is has written five books on the evolution and future of human sexuality, monogamy, adultery and divorce, gender differences in the brain, the chemistry of romantic love, and most recently, human personality types and why we fall in love with one person rather than another..
She has written five books on the evolution and future of human sexuality, monogamy, adultery and divorce, gender differences in the brain, the chemistry of romantic love, and most recently, human personality types and why we fall in love with one person rather than another.