Is Yawning Contagious?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the phenomenon of yawning and its potential contagiousness, drawing parallels to other behaviors like sneezing. Participants explore various aspects of the topic, including personal experiences, methodological concerns regarding studies on yawning, and speculative connections to loneliness and social interactions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants note the similarity between yawning and sneezing in social contexts, suggesting that one person's yawn may trigger others to yawn.
  • Concerns are raised about the methodology of studies on yawning, questioning whether the findings are robust and what variables might need to be controlled.
  • One participant suggests that yawning may serve a biological function, such as cooling the brain and signaling readiness, which could explain its contagious nature.
  • Another participant proposes a mathematical approach to understanding social behaviors, including yawning and loneliness, drawing historical parallels to the work of Galileo and Newton.
  • Personal anecdotes are shared regarding experiences of yawning in social settings, with some noting that it can lead to others yawning or even falling asleep.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the topic, with no clear consensus on the mechanisms behind yawning's contagiousness or the validity of the studies referenced. Methodological concerns and personal interpretations of the phenomenon remain contested.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the complexity of establishing causation versus correlation in studies of yawning, particularly in relation to social dynamics and individual feelings of loneliness.

Jimmy Snyder
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I didn't read this article, I am still digesting the title:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34209727/ns/health-behavior"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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I only read a short snippet (the one line that shows up when the story pops up on Google News). But, yeah, the title made me laugh...and my head spin a bit. I like your suggestion.
 
I don't think I've ever really felt lonely in my entire life. That's a feeling foreign to me. Even if I've been by myself for extended periods of time, I just feel bored. Never lonely.
 
This is like if someone in a group sneezes, then all of a sudden, more people start sneezing.
 
Does the methodology of this study hold water?
 
what said:
This is like if someone in a group sneezes, then all of a sudden, more people start sneezing.

I think you mean yawning.
 
theCandyman said:
I think you mean yawning.

But then they'd be bored, not lonely.
 
theCandyman said:
I think you mean yawning.

There was an article if I remember correctly, that yawning cools your brain and signals readiness. Therefore it would be essential for others to do the same.
 
Or another option is mathematical equations to relationships

Okay I'm telling everyone, this is why we need to discover mathematical equations in forming friendships/relationships, so that we can turn that "loneliness frown" upside down.

Historians have said what set Galileo/Newton apart from the others of their time was they found mathematical equations for their ideas. It helped them be creative, not in a sense of humor/entertainment way but rather scientific "come up with new ideas that are useful" way. Likewise if we could do the same with looking at data scatter plots for forming relationships/friendships, maybe it could allow us to be "creative" in a come up with new and useful ways of interacting with that special someone. Isaac Newton was creative, so why can't we?
 
  • #10
Methodology

Newai said:
Does the methodology of this study hold water?

You're right, correlation doesn't prove causation, but rather association. One possibility is to then control for other variables and see if the correlation still remains. Although it doesn't prove nor even probably cause-effect, it can give more/less confidence in a conclusion.

It's the same concept when the health field says smoking is bad for you. It's not ethical to give an experimental group so many smokes a day and a control group a placebo and see who is more likely to die earlier, however they have extensively tried controlling for other variables and found that the correlation regarding mortality rates among smokers is still there even after all that. Not as good as a true controlled experiment and can't prove, but does give more/less confidence.

In the case of this study, I'd guess one thing they'd need to control for is the possibility of lonely people hanging out with others who are already lonely vs. not already lonely. This could be done by comparing the lonely people who hang out with the non lonely people to see if the correlation is still when their friends are lonely later on also. I haven't looked at the actual study stated there and it could get extremely complex, so I have no idea what effort they put into internal validity, but you get my point.
 
  • #11
what said:
This is like if someone in a group sneezes, then all of a sudden, more people start sneezing.
I've never seen that happen, then again, I'm lonely.
 
  • #12
theCandyman said:
I think you mean yawning.
I'm pretty sure it's yawning. It's something I noticed when I was on the lecture tour. First one person in the audience yawns and then they all start yawning. Some even go to sleep.
 
  • #13
jimmysnyder said:
I'm pretty sure it's yawning. It's something I noticed when I was on the lecture tour. First one person in the audience yawns and then they all start yawning. Some even go to sleep.
I have experienced the same effect, jimmy. The yawn reflex seemed somehow to be tied to steam-table training for boiler operators. They were probably just cooling their brains and signaling readiness. I was flattered.
 

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