How DiCaprio's Romeo And Juliet came out as the top movie tear-jerker
Watching Romeo wooing Juliet is almost guaranteed to set hearts a-flutter and pulses racing among movie fans.
But it's not simply that the audience are hopeless romantics...it's all down to quantified electroencephalography.
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Smoochy: Leonardo Dicaprio and Claire Danes in Romeo And Juliet,
which a report has found is most likely to make us cry
So the palpitations, increased heart rate, raised blood pressure, goose pimples and sweating palms depicted by the actors on screen are felt in real life by those watching.
And an experiment has found that the movie which most gets our emotional empathy racing is Romeo And Juliet, starring Claire Danes and Leonardo Dicaprio.
The study involved wiring up 1,000 volunteers to electrodes to measure their heart rate and blood pressure as they watched various films.
Researchers found romantic scenes triggered the "mirror' neurons, causing the viewers to experience the same emotions as the characters.
The volunteers - equal numbers of both sexes - had to wear a cap fitted with 20 wired sensors called EEGs, or electroencephalograms.
They were then shown significant ten-minute clips from movies as their responses were measured.
Nearly 20 per cent had a surge in heart rate when they were shown scenes of Romeo And Juliet dying in the 1996 movie by Baz Luhrmann.
Twelve per cent had the same reaction to the ending of Casablanca, which came second in the study by DVD rental service Lovefilm.com.
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Emotional: Patrick Swayze's performance in Dirty Dancing got
film-goers crying
And ten per cent were swooning when Patrick Swayze returned from
the dead to woo Demi Moore in Ghost - and also welled up when he
swept Jennifer Grey off her feet in Dirty Dancing.Women showed a greater response to the romantic clips.
Their heart rates soared on average from 65 to 130 beats per minute at key moments, but men's rates rarely topped 100.
Dr Lewis said: "We only tend to see men's pulses really racing when they are shown action films like Die Hard."
"This means if a plot involves romance, viewers will experience the same response as if it was happening to them.
"The more romantic the movie, the more physically and emotionally aroused viewers become as mirror neurons go into overdrive.
"In addition, powerful chemicals related to amphetamines will be released into the blood, producing the giddy high often experienced with romance.
"Mirror neurons are a relatively recent discovery, but they help us develop empathy.
"They are why people get moved to tears or get excited by what they are seeing, because they become emotionally involved."
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