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I've heard that it's not because you tired! Anyone know?

2006-12-11 01:52:28 · 24 answers · asked by Kayle xxx 2 in Health Other - Health

24 answers

you are bored and your brain wants oxygen too

or your signaling me to come and save you from that boring guy your with, because you know I can be want you need, maybe not want you want, but what you NEED!

2006-12-12 03:26:23 · answer #1 · answered by david s 2 · 1 1

A yawn (synonyms chasma, oscitation from the Latin verb oscitare, to open the mouth wide[1]) is a reflex of deep inhalation and exhalation associated with being tired, with a need to sleep, or from lack of stimulation. Pandiculation is the term for the act of stretching and yawning. Yawning is a powerful non-verbal message with several possible meanings, depending on the circumstances. It is also claimed to help increase the state of alertness of a person. The exact causes of yawning are still unknown.

The yawn reflex is often described as contagious: if one person yawns, this will cause another person to "sympathetically" yawn.[3] 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[4]. 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. At a distal level (in terms of evolutionary advantage), yawning might be a herd instinct.[5] Other theories suggest that the yawn serves to synchronize mood behavior among gregarious animals, similar to the howling of the wolf pack during a full moon. It signals tiredness to other members of the group in order to synchronize sleeping patterns and periods of activity. It can serve as a warning in displaying large, canine teeth. This phenomenon has been observed among various primates. The threat gesture is a way of maintaining order in the primates' social structure. The contagion of yawning is interspecific, for example a human yawning in front of a pet dog can incite the dog to yawn as well. Oddly, sometimes sympathetic yawning may be caused by simply looking at a picture of a person or animal yawning, or even seeing the word yawn.

2006-12-11 10:28:17 · answer #2 · answered by Johny0555 3 · 0 0

A yawn (synonyms chasma, oscitation from the Latin verb oscitare, to open the mouth wide[1]) is a reflex of deep inhalation and exhalation associated with being tired, with a need to sleep, or from lack of stimulation. Pandiculation is the term for the act of stretching and yawning. Yawning is a powerful non-verbal message with several possible meanings, depending on the circumstances. It is also claimed to help increase the state of alertness of a person. The exact causes of yawning are still unknown.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yawn

2006-12-11 09:57:16 · answer #3 · answered by Danelle 5 · 0 0

A yawn (synonyms chasma, oscitation from the Latin verb oscitare, to open the mouth wide[1]) is a reflex of deep inhalation and exhalation associated with being tired, with a need to sleep, or from lack of stimulation. Pandiculation is the term for the act of stretching and yawning. Yawning is a powerful non-verbal message with several possible meanings, depending on the circumstances. It is also claimed to help increase the state of alertness of a person. The exact causes of yawning are still unknown.

2006-12-11 09:55:16 · answer #4 · answered by Stevie 1 · 2 0

Your brain needs oxygen and you are probably not breathing correctly for whatever reason be it concentration or tiredness so your body compensates by yawning. This is why we yawn so much when we are tired because we are not breathing deeply enough and so our brain sends the signal to yawn thus drawing in a large amount of oxygen.

2006-12-11 09:56:44 · answer #5 · answered by curiosity 4 · 0 0

It’s widely assumed that yawning occurs because we are tired or bored or because we see someone else doing it, but there isn’t any hard evidence to support these beliefs.

Scientists do not purport to know all of the biological mechanisms of the yawn, but tend to agree that a yawn is an involuntary respiratory reflex, which regulates the carbon dioxide and oxygen levels in the blood.

Technically, a yawn is the reflex opening of the mouth followed by the deep inhalation and slow exhalation of oxygen.

2006-12-11 09:54:21 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 5 1

THE TRUTH IS that we don’t completely understand why people, or animals for that matter, yawn.

It’s widely assumed that yawning occurs because we are tired or bored or because we see someone else doing it, but there isn’t any hard evidence to support these beliefs.

Scientists do not purport to know all of the biological mechanisms of the yawn, but tend to agree that a yawn is an involuntary respiratory reflex, which regulates the carbon dioxide and oxygen levels in the blood.

Technically, a yawn is the reflex opening of the mouth followed by the deep inhalation and slow exhalation of oxygen.

The very act of yawning is but one of a number of involuntary reflexes controlled by the spinal and nerve centers.

Scientists speculate that the onset of a yawn is triggered either by fatigue, or by sheer boredom as, at those times, breathing is shallow, and little oxygen is carried to the lungs by the oxygen-toting cardiovascular system.

When one yawns, his or her alertness is heightened, as the sudden intake of oxygen increases the heart rate, rids the lungs and the bloodstream of the carbon dioxide buildup, and forces oxygen through blood vessels in the brain, while restoring normal breathing and ventilating the lungs.

This quite plausible theory of yawning falls short of explaining many aspects of yawning. Scientists explain away the "contagious" nature of yawning, that is when one person's yawn triggers another nearby to yawn, as due to the power of suggestion, but are at a loss when attempting to explain why yawning occurs excessively in patients with lower brainstem damage or with multiple sclerosis.

Other unlocked mysteries include why fetuses in the womb yawn, when it is a well-known fact that they do not intake oxygen into their lungs until after live birth, or why individuals with high concentrations of oxygen in their blood streams yawn.

2006-12-11 09:55:37 · answer #7 · answered by thewirelessguy999 3 · 2 1

It is your brain telling you that it's needs more oxygen. It makes you yawn and yawn. When you start yawning, try taking some slow, deep breaths. That will usually make the yawning stop.

2006-12-11 09:56:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's caused by low oxygen levels in your system. When you yawn, you draw in a deep breath and replenish your oxy levels.

Take a trip to the mountains above 6,000 feet and you will find yourself yawning all day.

2006-12-11 09:55:41 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you yawn because your brain decides it's not getting enough oxygen so it triggers your response of open your mouth and take a big deep breath, nothing to do with being tired!

2006-12-11 10:04:56 · answer #10 · answered by Sinead G 3 · 0 0

Yawn is the only time when married men get to open their mouth!!

2006-12-11 09:56:15 · answer #11 · answered by weirdcool_creep 2 · 0 1

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