| Literature DB >> 23293583 |
Andrew C Gallup1, Omar T Eldakar.
Abstract
Over the past 5 years numerous reports have confirmed and replicated the specific brain cooling and thermal window predictions derived from the thermoregulatory theory of yawning, and no study has found evidence contrary to these findings. Here we review the comparative research supporting this model of yawning among homeotherms, while highlighting a recent report showing how the expression of contagious yawning in humans is altered by seasonal climate variation. The fact that yawning is constrained to a thermal window of ambient temperature provides unique and compelling support in favor of this theory. Heretofore, no existing alternative hypothesis of yawning can explain these results, which have important implications for understanding the potential functional role of this behavior, both physiologically and socially, in humans and other animals. In discussion we stress the broader applications of this work in clinical settings, and counter the various criticisms of this theory.Entities:
Keywords: brain cooling; contagious yawning; sleep; thermoregulation; yawning
Year: 2013 PMID: 23293583 PMCID: PMC3534187 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2012.00188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Empirical tests of the brain cooling hypothesis.
| (1) Rises in brain temperature should precede the onset of yawns | – Gallup and Gallup ( | – Humans (oral temperature) |
| – Shoup-Knox et al. ( | – Rats (prelimbic cortex) | |
| – Shoup-Knox ( | – Rats (prelimbic cortex) | |
| (2) Decreases in brain temperature should follow yawns | – Gallup and Gallup ( | – Humans (oral temperature) |
| – Shoup-Knox et al. ( | – Rats (prelimbic cortex) | |
| – Shoup-Knox ( | – Rats (prelimbic cortext) |
Indicates a replication of this effect in an independent sample of this species.
Empirical tests and observations supporting the thermal window hypothesis.
| (1) Yawning should increase with initial rises in ambient temperature | – Campos and Fedigan ( | – Capuchins ( |
| – Deputte ( | – Macaques ( | |
| – Gallup et al. ( | – Budgerigars ( | |
| – Gallup et al. ( | – Rats ( | |
| (2) Yawning should decrease when ambient temperatures draw near or exceed body temperature | – Gallup et al. ( | – Budgerigars ( |
| – Gallup et al. ( | – Rats ( | |
| – Gallup and Eldakar ( | – Humans | |
| (3) Yawning should diminish at very low ambient temperatures (e.g., −10°C) | – Unknown | – None tested |
Indicates a replication of this effect in an independent sample of this species.
How thermoregulatory changes influence yawning in humans: medical conditions, drug use and behavior (modified from Gallup and Gallup, .
| CNS damage | X | X | ||
| Epilepsy | X | X | ||
| Headaches | X | X | ||
| Modafinil | X | X | ||
| Multiple sclerosis | X | X | ||
| Opiate withdrawal | X | X | ||
| Orexin-A | X | X | ||
| SSRIs | X | X | ||
| Sleep deprivation | X | X | ||
| Stress | X | X | ||
| D2-like agonists | X | X | ||
| Opioid peptides | X | X | ||
| Propranolol | X | X | ||
| Sleep | X | X |
Reviewed in Gallup and Gallup (2008);
Launay et al. (2002);
Gallup and Gallup (2010);
Collins et al. (2007);
Meythaler and Stinson (1994);
Ghanizadeh (.
Summary of the association between yawning and thermoregulation.
| (1) Brain centers controlling thermoregulation also control yawning |
| (2) The physiological consequences of yawning facilitate selective brain cooling |
| (3) Sleep cycles trigger yawning during distinct changes in brain/body temperature |
| (4) Conditions, drugs, and neurotransmitters affect yawning and temperature in predicted ways |
| (5) Yawning is inhibited by nasal breathing and forehead cooling |
| (6) Predicted fluctuations in brain temperature surround yawning events in rodents |
| (7) Predicted fluctuations in oral temperature surround excessive yawning in humans |
| (8) Hyperthermic birds yawn sooner following handling-stress |
| (9) Fluctuations in ambient temperature produce predicted changes in yawn frequency |
| (10) Yawning is reduced when ambient temperatures near or exceed body temperature |
Indicates that a replication of this specific effect has been demonstrated in an independent sample;
Miller et al. (.