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Old 03-25-2005   #1 (permalink)
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Yawwwwwn

So what is a yawn?
and why is it contageous?
i used to think it had something to do with the pressure in the air...until i noticed it's contageous over the phone 3,000 miles apart..


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Old 03-25-2005   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

That's a very good question. I saw a documentary on Discovery Channel about that...how mammals yawn and how it is contageous...it said that it has social functions as well as physical functions but as for *why* we yawn I am not sure.


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Old 03-25-2005   #3 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tormod
That's a very good question. I saw a documentary on Discovery Channel about that...how mammals yawn and how it is contageous...it said that it has social functions as well as physical functions but as for *why* we yawn I am not sure.
Tormod; I believe that the yawn response is brought on by the body's need to increase the oxygen level in the blood. I don't remember where or how I came across this information, but it was a reliable source. As for why it seems to be contageous, for that I have no answer other than it may have something to do with mental suggestion.


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Old 03-25-2005   #4 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
Originally Posted by infamous
Tormod; I believe that the yawn response is brought on by the body's need to increase the oxygen level in the blood. I don't remember where or how I came across this information, but it was a reliable source. As for why it seems to be contageous, for that I have no answer other than it may have something to do with mental suggestion.
Clearly, this is an innate compulsion for mammals to share views of there respective infundibulae.

This was the neanderthal progenitor of "if you show me yours, I will show you mine."


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Old 03-25-2005   #5 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
Originally Posted by infamous
Tormod; I believe that the yawn response is brought on by the body's need to increase the oxygen level in the blood.
This article supports that claim...


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Old 03-25-2005   #6 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
Originally Posted by Biochemist
Clearly, this is an innate compulsion for mammals to share views of there respective infundibulae.

This was the neanderthal progenitor of "if you show me yours, I will show you mine."
Really?? thats a good one. Haven't heard about that view yet, although this does seem quite possible when you think about it!!


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Old 03-25-2005   #7 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
Originally Posted by C1ay
This article supports that claim...
The intriguing part of this is the contagion of it. Humans, at times, seem to odd. Coughs (the non-infections sort) also appear socially contagious. You know, the single cough during a quiet moment in a live play that precipititates another dozen coughs.

Fortunately, this does not appear to apply to farts.


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Old 03-25-2005   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

this is all really cool stuff.


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Old 03-25-2005   #9 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

One reason we yawm is to equalize pressure. Our outer ear has an external auditory meatus - that's the tunnel that leads into your ear where you have to clean earwax out of. The external auditory meatus terminates at the tympanic membrane (eardrum). On the other side of the tympanic membrane is the middle ear, or tympanic cavity. The pressure in the tympanic cavity is not necessarily the same as the atmospheric pressure in the external auditory meatus. This can cause a reduction in hearing, or if the difference is large enough, pain. The tympanic cavity has a tube, called the Eustachian tube, that runs down to the pharynx (I believe into the nasopharynx, but it might be the oropharynx instead). When we yawn, air 'inflates' the tube and allows air to pass up into the tympanic cavity, equalizing its pressure with atmospheric pressure.

This is why people are advised to yawn when climbing or descending in planes.


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PS: Looked up the anatomy of the ear in my A&P text and found 2 things.

First, it is the nasopharynx that the Eustachian tube connects to.

Second, I see no mention of the Eustachain tube being "deflated" and yawning causing it to "inflate". I'm pretty sure my professor said that though, and she has been correct on other things she's stated but weren't in the book (but she's also been wrong about a thing or two).

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PPS: Looks like my professor was right.

Quote:
”Pressurization of the middle ear can and should be vigorous on the surface [as opposed to during a dive], when no negative pressure gradient is present across the middle ear. This means that it is possible (and desirable) for an individual to pre-pressurize the middle ear and to inflate the Eustachian tube prior to descent.” (http://faculty.washington.edu/ekay/MEbaro.html)

Last edited by TeleMad; 03-25-2005 at 07:47 PM..
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Old 03-25-2005   #10 (permalink)
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Re: Yawwwwwn

Quote:
I believe that the yawn response is brought on by the body's need to increase the oxygen level in the blood.
Quote:
Originally Posted by C1ay
This article supports that claim...
Actually, it contradicts that idea:

Quote:
A long-standing theory behind yawning is that yawning is caused by an excess of carbon dioxide and lack of oxygen in the blood. The brain stem detects this and triggers the yawn reflex. The mouth stretches wide and the lungs inhale deeply, bringing oxygen into the lungs and thence to the bloodstream. It is almost certain however, that this hypothesis is not correct;
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