Ever wonder why you close your eyes whenever you
lean in for a kiss? Or why it's
considered such bad form to sneakily open your eyes mid-make out?
A
study featured on The Debrief sets
the record straight. According to psychologists Polly Dalton and Sandra
Murphy, whose research was published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, it's
really, really hard for our brain to focus on our other senses if we've got any
visual stimuli to distract us.
As a result, we need to close our eyes when we kiss so we can
actually enjoy how it feels physically.
Dalton and Murphy discovered this by asking a group of
participants to do different letter-searching tasks. While they did this,
a small vibration was applied to their hands.
The
researchers found that when the participants were doing trickier
letter-searching tasks, they didn't feel the vibrations as
strongly because their eyes were busier, and their brains were focused on
that.
So
when we kiss, it's the same deal. It just won't feel as good with your eyes
roaming about and getting distracted from the other sensations. (Plus, it's a
little creepy to stare at someone the entire time you're making out, anyway.)
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