Yawning Experiments
Is Yawning Contagious?
The yawn reflex is often described as contagious: if one person yawns, this will cause another person to "sympathetically" yawn.[3][8]
Observing another person's yawning face (especially his/her eyes), or
even reading about or thinking about yawning, can cause a person to
yawn.[3][9]
However, only about 55% of people in a given audience will respond to
such a stimulus; fewer if only the mouth is shown in a visual stimulus.[10]The proximate cause for contagious yawning may lie with mirror neurons, i.e., neurons in the frontal cortex of certain vertebrates, which upon being exposed to a stimulus from conspecific (same species) and occasionally interspecific organisms, activates the same regions in the brain.[11] Mirror neurons have been proposed as a driving force for imitation which lies at the root of much human learning, e.g., language acquisition. Yawning may be an offshoot of the same imitative impulse. A 2007 study found that children with autism spectrum disorders,
unlike typical children, did not yawn after seeing videos of other
people yawning; this supports the claim that contagious yawning is
based on the capacity for empathy.[12]
Recent research carried out by Catriona Morrison, a lecturer in psychology at the University of Leeds,
involving monitoring the yawning behaviour of students kept waiting in
a reception area, indicates a connection (supported by neuro-imaging
research) between empathic ability and yawning. "We believe that
contagious yawning indicates empathy. It indicates an appreciation of
other people's behavioural and physiological state," said Morrison.[7]
To look at the issue in terms of evolutionary advantage, if there is one at all, yawning might be a herd instinct.[13] Other theories suggest that the yawn serves to synchronize mood behavior among gregarious animals, similar to the howling of the wolf
pack. It signals tiredness to other members of the group in order to
synchronize sleeping patterns and periods of activity. This phenomenon
has been observed among various primates.
The threat gesture is a way of maintaining order in the primates'
social structure. Specific studies were conducted on chimpanzees[14] and stumptail macaques[15].
A group of these animals was shown a video of other conspecifics
yawning, and both chimpanzees and stumptail macaques yawned also. This
helps to partly confirm a yawn's "contagiousness."
Gordon Gallup, who hypothesizes that yawning may be a means of
keeping the brain cool, also hypothesizes that "contagious" yawning may
be a survival instinct inherited from our evolutionary past. "During
human evolutionary history when we were subject to predation and
attacks by other groups, if everybody yawns in response to seeing
someone yawn, the whole group becomes much more vigilant, and much
better at being able to detect danger."[5]
Notes and references
- ^ a b MedOnline.net term pandiculate
- ^ A. Price Heusner. YAWNING AND ASSOCIATED PHENOMENA. Physiological Review 1946: 25; 156–168. Online pdf-version
- ^ a b c Provine RR (2005). "Yawning". American Scientist 93 (6): 532. doi:10.1511/2005.6.532.
- ^ Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved on 2007-24-07.
- ^ a b c Gordon G. Gallup. Good Morning America - The Science of Yawning (July 30, 2007) [TV-Series]. USA: ABC.
- ^ Gallup AC & Gallup GG Jr (2007). "Yawning as a brain cooling mechanism: Nasal breathing and forehead cooling diminish the incidence of contagious yawning." (pdf). Evolutionary Psychology 5 (1).
- ^ BBC News, Monday 10 September 2007, "Contagious yawn 'sign of empathy'"
- ^ The website by Émilie attempts to prove this.
- ^ Provine RR (1986). "Yawning as a stereotyped action pattern and releasing stimulus.". Ethology 72: 109-122.
- ^ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=14654608
- ^ V.S. Ramachandran, Mirror Neurons and imitation learning as the driving force behind "the great leap forward" in human evolution. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.
- ^ Senju
A, Maeda M, Kikuchi Y, Hasegawa T, Tojo Y, Osanai H (2007). "Absence of
contagious yawning in children with autism spectrum disorder". Biol Lett. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0337. PMID 17698452.
- ^ Schürmann et al. (2005). "Yearning to yawn: the neural basis of contagious yawning.". NeuroImage 24 (4): 1260-1264. PMID 15670705. (see also Platek et al. (2005). "Contagious Yawning and The Brain.". Cognitive Brain Research 23 (2-3): 448-52. PMID 15820652. )
- ^ Anderson JR, Myowa-Yamakoshi M & Matsuzawa T (2004). "Contagious yawning in chimpanzees.". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences: S468-S470. PMID 15801606.
- ^ Paukner A & Anderson JR (2006). "Video-induced yawning in stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides)". Biology Letters 2 (1): 36-38. PMID 17148320.
- ^ Baenninger R (1987). "Some comparative aspects of yawning in Betta sleepnes, Homo Sapiens, Pantera leo and Papio sphinx.". Journal of Comparative Psychology 101 (4): 349-354.
- ^ Iona Opie and Moira Tatem, A Dictionary of Superstitions (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992), 454.
External links
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