This is your brain on pleasure (even the guilty kind)

Trending 3 hours ago

This is your brain on pleasure (even the guilty kind)

Illustration of two versions of the same woman with long brown hair and a green shirt. The one on the left sits at a table in front of a piece of cake, fork in hand, face in the other hand, looking sad. The other woman stands over her pointing with an angry expression and the other hand on her hip.

Neuroscientists say the pleasure response helps us survive as a species. undrey/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

undrey/Getty Images

It's likely you have at least one "guilty pleasure." Maybe it's romance novels. Or reality TV… Playing video games… or getting swept into obscure corners of TikTok. Neuroscientists say the pleasure response helps us survive as a species. So why do we feel embarrassed by some of the things we love the most? Even if you don't have these negative emotions, experiencing – and studying – pleasure is not as straightforward as it might seem. For a long time, neuroscientists thought the concept of "pleasure" referred to a singular system in the brain. But as research into the subject grew, scientists realized that pleasure is really a cycle of "wanting" and "liking" – each with separate neural mechanisms. Today on the show, producer Rachel Carlson explores this cycle with researchers, who weigh in on the science of pleasure. Even the kind that makes us feel guilty.

Read more of Rachel's story on guilty pleasures.

Interested in more brain science? Email us your question at [email protected].

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Listen to Short Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

This episode was produced by Rebecca Ramirez and Berly McCoy. Rebecca Ramirez also edited. Rachel Carlson checked the facts. The audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez.

More
Source science
science