If you think alcohol can make you more attractive in social situations, you’re wrong. A new study shows that alcohol abuse may disrupt the brain’s ability to judge and respond to social imperatives such as facial expressions. When a person is drunk, there is a risk of disconnections in areas of the brain that are used to identify and direct social interaction. According to Professor Lou Ann Penn of the University of Illinois at Chicago. According to Professor Pan, the research results initially suggest why aggressive and disagreeable behavior is enhanced after alcohol abuse. In the study, 12 college students were divided into 2 groups of drinkers or non-drinkers, who were asked to be paired with photographs of faces with identical facial expressions, including happy, angry, fearful or normal, while being scanned with fMRI. Brain scans showed that subjects viewing happy, angry and fearful faces while intoxicated had weaker brain communication in the cerebellar tonsils and orbitofrontal cortex, two areas involved in processing social and emotional information such as facial expressions. In people who are not intoxicated, the activity of these two regions is usually synchronized, and the synchronization of these two regions is reduced in intoxicated people. When a person is heavily intoxicated, signals cueing relevant emotional changes are not processed properly in the brain because the cerebellar tonsils are unable to respond as they should. So, based on the above research, how much of what you think you promise each other when you cross glasses at the drinking table is still believable? Do you still drink excessively in order to behave appropriately?