Why men love breasts in women? According to Neuroscience
Psychology of Breast,
Why do straight men devote so much headspace to those big, bulbous bags of fat drooping from women's chests? Scientists have never satisfactorily explained men's curious breast fixation, but now, a neuroscientist has struck upon an explanation that he says "just makes a lot of sense."
When a woman's nipples are stimulated during
breast-feeding, the neurochemical oxytocin, otherwise known as the "love
drug," floods her brain, helping to focus her attention and affection on
her baby. But research over the past few years has shown that in humans, this
circuitry isn't reserved for exclusive use by infants.
Psychology of Breast,
Why do straight men devote so much headspace to those big, bulbous bags of fat drooping from women's chests? Scientists have never satisfactorily explained men's curious breast fixation, but now, a neuroscientist has struck upon an explanation that he says "just makes a lot of sense."
Larry Young, a professor of psychiatry at Emory
University who studies the neurological basis of complex social behaviors,
thinks human evolution has harnessed an ancient neural circuit that originally
evolved to strengthen the mother-infant bond during breast-feeding, and now
uses this brain circuitry to strengthen the bond between couples as well. The
result? Men, like babies, love breasts.

Recent studies have found that nipple stimulation
enhances sexual arousal in the great majority of women, and it activates the
same brain areas as vaginal and clitoral stimulation. When a sexual partner
touches, massages or nibbles a woman's breasts, Young said, this triggers the
release of oxytocin in the woman's brain, just like what happens when a baby
nurses. But in this context, the oxytocin focuses the woman's attention on her
sexual partner, strengthening her desire to bond with this person.
In other words, men can make themselves more desirable by
stimulating a woman's breasts during foreplay and sex. Evolution has, in a
sense, made men want to do this.
Attraction to breasts "is a brain organization
effect that occurs in straight males when they go through puberty," Young
told Life's Little Mysteries. "Evolution has selected for this brain
organization in men that makes them attracted to the breasts in a sexual
context, because the outcome is that it activates the female bonding circuit,
making women feel more bonded with him. It's a behavior that males have evolved
in order to stimulate the female's maternal bonding circuitry."
So, why did this evolutionary change happen in humans,
and not in other breast-feeding mammals? Young thinks it's because we form
monogamous relationships, whereas 97 percent of mammals do not. "Secondly,
it might have to do with the fact that we are upright and have face-to-face
sex, which provides more opportunity for nipple stimulation during sex. In
monogamous voles, for example, the nipples are hanging toward the ground and
the voles mate from behind, so this didn't evolve," he said. "So,
maybe the nature of our sexuality has allowed greater access to the
breasts."
Young said competing theories of men's breast fixation
don't stand up to scrutiny. For example, the argument that men tend to select
full-breasted women because they think these women's breast fat will make them
better at nourishing babies falls short when one considers that "sperm is
cheap" compared with eggs, and men don't need to be choosy.
But Young's new theory will face scrutiny of its own.
Commenting on the theory, Rutgers University anthropologist Fran Mascia-Lees,
who has written extensively about the evolutionary role of breasts, said one
concern is that not all men are attracted to them. "Always important
whenever evolutionary biologists suggest a universal reason for a behavior and
emotion: how about the cultural differences?" Mascia-Lees wrote in an
email. In some African cultures, for example, women don't cover their breasts,
and men don't seem to find them so, shall we say, titillating.
Young says that just because breasts aren't covered in
these cultures "doesn't mean that massaging them and stimulating them is
not part of the foreplay in these cultures. As of yet, there are not very many
studies that look at [breast stimulation during foreplay] in an anthropological
context," he said.
Young elaborates on his theory of breast love, and other
neurological aspects of human sexuality, in a new book, "The Chemistry
Between Us" (Current Hardcover, 2012), co-authored by Brian Alexander.
Image source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1118608
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