I Yawn, You Yawn. Why?

The person next to you yawns.  This suddenly irrepressible urge comes over you.  You yawn, too.

Why are yawns so contagious?

A yawn is a way for the body to take in a fresh supply of oxygen. It is common among stressed people or athletes to do before an event that requires alertness. However, a yawn is also the universal sign for ‘I need a nap,’ so why is it that when somebody nearby lets out a yawn, you suddenly have the urge to reply with one of your own?

“In short, we don’t know why yawns are contagious,” says Meredith Williamson, PhD, clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Medicine, at newswise.com. “Researchers used to think that yawning was only signaling a need for sleep, but now they believe that it can communicate a shift in alertness or boredom.”
Yawning isn’t the only unspoken form of communication that is contagious. Someone laughing might make us want to, too. This is another social cue that makes you feel the same mimicking urge, also known as experiencing empathy.
One popular theory about contagious yawning is that it is related to empathy and that people who have higher levels of empathy tend to yawn more frequently when someone else yawns than somebody on the lower end of the scale, or someone with a mental disorder, would.
“Researchers have seen that yawning may not be as contagious to people with autism or schizophrenia,” Williamson notes. “More research is being done to determine the cause of this.”
One 2013 study challenged the theory that children with autism lack the tendency to contagiously yawn because they struggle with empathy. The study found that when these children focused their gaze on people’s mouths (instead of their eyes), they were more likely to experience a contagious yawn—hinting that facial expressions and social cues may play more of a factor than empathy.
 Also, yawning is not universal across the ages. Children under the age of four, along with older adults, are less likely to yawn in response to somebody else. The reason for this, as well as the reason for contagious yawning overall, is likely multi-factorial—relating to social cues, empathy and possibly other influences.
Even animals do it!
Yawning may be an unspoken form of communication, but it’s not exclusive to humans. In fact, some species of primates and canines have been prone to yawning in a response to each other’s yawns—with dogs showing evidence of their unique bond with humans by yawning after a person yawns.
“It’s multifactorial,” Williamson explains. “It could be partly an innate form of communication or it could be related to empathy, or a bit of both combined with other factors.”
So maybe next time someone yawns, and you do, too, just realize you're experiencing empathy!





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