Yawning Is Not About Blood Oxygen, It Is About Cooling The Brain - Why do we yawn? It's unclear. One hypothesis is that yawning helps to increase the oxygen supply but there no association between yawning and blood oxygen levels has been found. Psychologists now have a different notion - that yawning cools the brain.
Sleep cycles, cortical arousal and stress are all associated with fluctuations in brain temperature, Yawning subsequently functions to keep the brain temperature balanced and in optimal homeostasis, according to a team of researchers led by Psychologist Andrew Gallup of SUNY College at Oneonta. According to their hypothesis, yawning should also be easily manipulated by ambient temperature variation, since exchange with cool ambient air temperature may facilitate lowering brain temperature. Specifically, the researchers hypothesized that yawning should only occur within an optimal range of temperatures, i.e., a thermal window.
To test this, Jorg Massen and Kim Dusch of the University of Vienna measured contagious yawning frequencies of pedestrians outdoors in Vienna, during both the winter and summer months, and then compared these results to an identical study conducted earlier in arid climate of Arizona. Pedestrians were asked to view a series of images of people yawning, and then they self-reported on their own yawning behavior.
Results showed that in Vienna people yawned more in summer than in winter, whereas in Arizona people yawned more in winter than in summer. It turned out that it was not the seasons themselves, nor the amount of daylight hours experienced, but that contagious yawning was constrained to an optimal thermal zone or range of ambient temperatures around 20 degrees C.
In contrast, contagious yawning diminished when temperatures were relatively high at around 37 degrees C in the summer of Arizona or low and around freezing in the winter of Vienna. Lead author Massen says that where yawning functions to cool the brain, yawning is not functional when ambient temperatures are as hot as the body, and may not be necessary or may even have harmful consequences when it is freezing outside.
While most research on contagious yawning emphasizes the influence of interpersonal and emotional-cognitive variables on its expression, this report adds to accumulating research suggesting that the underlying mechanism for yawning, both spontaneous and contagious forms, is involved in regulating brain temperature. In turn, the cooling of the brain functions to improve arousal and mental efficiency.
The authors of this study suggest that the spreading of this behavior via contagious yawning could therefore function to enhance overall group vigilance.
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