This link has been bookmarked by 17 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Feb 2008, by isaac Mao.
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28 Apr 09
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21 Aug 08
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17 Jul 08
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26 Jun 08
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05 Apr 08
Amira .Researchers are revealing hidden complexities behind the simple act of kissing, which relays powerful messages to your brain, body and partner. * A kiss triggers a cascade of neural messages and chemicals that transmit tactile sensations, sexual exci
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28 Mar 08
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Kissing may have evolved from primate mothers’ practice of chewing food for their young and then feeding them mouth-to-mouth. Some scientists theorize that kissing is crucial to the evolutionary process of mate selection >.
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- A kiss triggers a cascade of neural messages and chemicals that transmit tactile sensations, sexual excitement, feelings of closeness, motivation and even euphoria.
- Kisses can convey important information about the status and future of a relationship. At the extreme, a bad first kiss can abruptly curtail a couple’s future.
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Affairs of the Lips: Why We Kiss
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13 Feb 08
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08 Feb 08
Adam Crowe"Researchers are revealing hidden complexities behind the simple act of kissing, which relays powerful messages to your brain, body and partner"
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02 Feb 08
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A kiss triggers a cascade of neural messages and chemicals that transmit tactile sensations, sexual excitement, feelings of closeness, motivation and even euphoria
-
- Kisses can convey important information about the status and future of a relationship. At the extreme, a bad first kiss can abruptly curtail a couple’s future.
- Kissing may have evolved from primate mothers’ practice of chewing food for their young and then feeding them mouth-to-mouth. Some scientists theorize that kissing is crucial to the evolutionary process of mate selection.
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Whatever else is going on when we kiss, our evolutionary history is embedded within this tender, tempestuous act. In the 1960s British zoologist and author Desmond Morris first proposed that kissing might have evolved from the practice in which primate mothers chewed food for their young and then fed them mouth-to-mouth, lips puckered. Chimpanzees feed in this manner, so our hominid ancestors probably did, too. Pressing outturned lips against lips may have then later developed as a way to comfort hungry children when food was scarce and, in time, to express love and affection in general. The human species might eventually have taken these proto-parental kisses down other roads until we came up with the more passionate varieties we have today.
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31 Jan 08
Pablo StafforiniResearchers are revealing hidden complexities behind the simple act of kissing, which relays powerful messages to your brain, body and partner
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