Top Stories
Search for tornado survivors
A powerful tornado with winds over 300 kilometres per hour has pulverised an Oklahoma City suburb, killing at least 91 people, officials say.
- Explainer: How do tornadoes form?
- Australia 'should help Dubai fraud man'
- Explainer: Ocean energy in Australia
- 'One in five kids' talk to strangers online
- Saudi Arabia executes five Yemenis
- Obama to take first major Africa trip
- Dagestan blasts kill four
- Apple 'uses firms outside US to avoid tax'
- Rudd steals PM thunder on school funding
-
-
Male-dominated industries attracting women
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Live betting odds to be banned on free TV
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Unions call for minimum wage rise
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
PM vows to help Aussie jailed in Dubai
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Oklahoma tornado toll rises above 90
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Crisis summitt hopes to solve suicide issue
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Custody Hotline facing the axe
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Dante's Inferno inspires Dan Brown's latest novel
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Syrian forces bombard rebel held city of Qusayr
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Childhood ADHD linked to adult obesity
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Sectarian violence erupts anew in Iraq
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Governor responds to Oklahoma crisis
21 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
On the ground in Oklahoma City
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Powerful tornado rips through Oklahoma
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Insight: Arranged Marriage preview
17 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 1
20 May 13 | 10:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 2
20 May 13 | 10:00
-
-
Insight: Arranged Marriage - Naveen on a suitable age to marry
16 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 3
20 May 13 | 8:00
-
-
Living Black: S18 Ep11 - Bourke Crime preview
16 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Oklahoma tornado toll rises above 90
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Syrian forces bombard rebel held city of Qusayr
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Childhood ADHD linked to adult obesity
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Bodies recovered from Oklahoma school
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
On the ground in Oklahoma City
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Dante's Inferno inspires Dan Brown's latest novel
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Robbie Deans extended interview
20 May 13 | 5:00
-
-
Syria refugees face Lebanon sanitation issues
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Lebanon provides schooling for Syria refugees
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Denmark claims Eurovision Contest
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Do companies have the right to patent human genes?
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Abbott's budget reply: Full speech
16 May 13 | 28:00
-
-
Stem cell breakthrough causes a stir
16 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Australia halts transfers to Afghan jail
16 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
GP bills 'may rise' under budget changes
15 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Federal budget: SBS gets extra funding
15 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
Federal budget: What Australians think
15 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Mastectomy patient shares life experience
15 May 13 | 7:00
-
-
Budget analysis: Shane Oliver extended interview
15 May 13 | 7:00
-
-
Mixed reaction to federal budget
14 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Budget 2013: Winners and losers
14 May 13 | 4:00
-
-
What the budget means for the economy
14 May 13 | 2:14
-
-
SBS interview: Hockey slams budget deficit
14 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Budget analysis: Karen Middleton reports
14 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Swan discusses budget with SBS
14 May 13 | 2:00
Radio News Bulletin
- Latest Bulletin
Tue 21st May 2013 6:41PM - Featured Stories
Wed 30th Nov -0001 12:00AM - TB concerns spread in Torres Strait
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM - The science beneath the vaccination debate
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM - Australians 'should make plans for final days'
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM
Blogs
More Blogs-
-
End of parity: Experts say A$ heading south
17 May 2013, 18:13 PM
-
-
The winning costs of Eurovision 2013
14 May 2013, 17:40 PM
-
-
Benghazi questions just won't go away
14 May 2013, 8:25 AM
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Video of US plane crash in Afghanistan believed to be authentic
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- Xenophon warns of Malaysia election fraud
- Malaysian elections expose serious divides
- Labor to take disability tax rise to poll
- Family's plea: Aussie facing Saudi terrorism charges
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- Will Malaysians vote for change?
- India sex crime laws not tough enough: UN
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- Comment: Declining sense of grief over Anzac
- Murrawarri people take sovereignty campaign to UN
- Australia rejects calls to boycott Sri Lanka meet
- Comment: Why are we debating 'blackface' in 2013?
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- Made in Bangladesh 'a label of concern'
- Polio survivor: I wish there had been a vaccine
- How young is too young to change sex?
Promote Advertisement
'Evolution gave us the romantic kiss'
In Mongolia, 90 per cent of people kiss, 10 per cent don%u2019t. Kissing is in our nature, whether we engage in kissing behavior or not. So where does it come from? (AAP)
Scientists have been wondering about why people kiss each other for more than 100 years, and why about 10 per cent of humanity don't kiss each other.
By Benno Müchler
DIE WELT/Worldcrunch
BERLIN - Scientists have been wondering about why people kiss each other for more than 100 years. Psychoanalysis’s founding father, Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freund (1856-1939) was convinced that kissing is innate – an instinct originated in every newborn’s need to breastfeed that is never lost.
But in 1900, when Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936) got his dog to drool at the sound of a bell, many psychologists took that as proof that behavior -- including human behavior -- was not a matter of instinct: it was learned. Human beings were the masters of their instincts, so kissing represented a conscious expression of love.
Modern science considers the will-or-nature debate outdated. Kissing is instinctive, but humans have different ways of behaving, is all.
Which would explain why some 650 million, or about 10% of humanity, don’t kiss each other. On his travels, the father of evolutionary theory Charles Darwin (1809-1882) noticed that. So did French anthropologist Paul d'Enjoy who in 1897 noted that for the Chinese mouth-to-mouth kissing was considered an abomination, a form of cannibalism. Around this time Danish scientist Kristoffer Nyrop observed that among Finnish peoples couples enjoyed bathing together but never kissed each other.
In Mongolia, 90% of people kiss, 10% don’t. Kissing is in our nature, whether we engage in kissing behavior or not. So where does it come from?
Where does kissing come from?
Freud’s hypothesis is still relevant, along with a second one posited in 1960 by British zoologist Desmond Morris: kissing comes from early humans' habit of feeding mouth-to-mouth. Chimpanzees still do that. And when food was scarce, so the theory goes, ape parents pressed their lips to their offspring’s mouths to reassure and calm them.
We know from the ancient Greeks that human beings used to feed each other mouth-to-mouth; and Austrian behavioral scientist Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt, who founded the field of human ethology, has documented the behavior among certain African tribes such as the Himba in northern Namibia.
Just why the tendency to kiss, as opposed to not kissing, took the upper hand in evolutionary terms is another unresolved issue. Using up calories doesn't explain anything, although a normal kiss does use up 6.4 calories per minute or more depending on circumstances.
Research by neurologists and sexologists offers the possibility that kissing is a biological aid to partner selection. According to American scientist Sarah Woodley of the University of Duquesne in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, it is a way of running a check on a potential partner’s immune system.
The illnesses to which a human is immune is coded in the MHC (major histocompatibility complex) genes -- and the smells and tastes of kisses pass this information on to us. The more different a kissee’s MHC genes are to those of the kisser, the more likely the couple is to team up – because the wider the spread of immunity, the more diseases their offspring will be immune to and the higher the life expectancy of those children will be.
One of the tests scientists used to demonstrate the MHC theory was having men and women smell T-shirts that had been worn by others. Most subjects did in fact prefer the shirts worn by those with MHC genes different to their own. However, not all subjects did – which is why Woodley reached the conclusion that MHC genes are not the determining factor for why two people who like each other would mate or marry.
American sexologist Helen Fisher agrees that the MHC check helps in determining partner selection but that other bio-mechanisms are at play as well.
Gender differences in kissing
Another puzzle is the role played by the hormone oxytocin, which when released has a calming and relieving effect on humans and is considered to be the hormonal “glue” of partnership. Couples in love show higher levels of it. So it made sense to assume that levels of it would rise when people kissed.
Not so, say American psychologists Wendy Hill and Carey Wilson of Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. Levels only rise in men – not women. In fact, in women levels actually sink. From this, Hill and Wilson came to the conclusion that unlike men women need more than a kiss to feel bound to their partner.
Hill and Wilson also showed that, when men and women kissed, levels of cortisol went down sharply in both sexes. Cortisol causes feelings of stress, while kissing is a de-stresser – which may also explain why kisser and kissee are in no hurry to disengage.
The kiss will remain a subject of scientific research not least because lovers aren’t the only ones kissing each other. The Pope kisses the ground of countries he visits. Churchgoers kiss the bishop’s ring. East Germany’s leader Erich Honecker and Russian leader Leonid Brezhnev famously kissed each other on the lips by way of greeting. And the French have traditionally kissed each other on the cheeks – with a kissing noise to accompany the ritual – to say hello and goodbye.
So it’s entirely possible that the 10% of the world’s non-kissers may soon join the 90% of those who do kiss. After all, we travel and emigrate more than ever before. In London-based American academic and writer Dr. Adrianne Blue’s 1997 book On Kissing: Travels in an Intimate Landscape, she writes that a little over 20 years ago it would have been unheard of for British acquaintances meeting in public to kiss each other on the cheeks by way of greeting.
But by the late 1990s, Blue writes, the only issue in London is whether two or three smackers are the proper form. She believes in the globalization of the kiss – with the kissers winning out.
Read the original article in German.
Photo - happyhipposnacks
VideoNEW
Podcasts
Blogs


