Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » More than a sign of sleepiness, yawning may cool the brain
21 September 2011 [20:00] - Today.Az
Though considered a mark of boredom or fatigue, yawning might also be a trait of the hot-headed. Literally.
A study led by Andrew Gallup, a postdoctoral research associate in
Princeton University's Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,
is the first involving humans to show that yawning frequency varies with
the season and that people are less likely to yawn when the heat
outdoors exceeds body temperature. Gallup and his co-author Omar
Eldakar, a postdoctoral fellow in the University of Arizona's Center for
Insect Science, report this month in the journal Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience that this seasonal disparity indicates that yawning could serve as a method for regulating brain temperature.
Gallup and Eldakar documented the yawning frequency of 160 people in
the winter and summer in Tucson, Arizona, with 80 people for each
season. They found that participants were more likely to yawn in the
winter, as opposed to the summer when ambient temperatures were equal to
or exceeding body temperature. The researchers concluded that warmer
temperatures provide no relief for overheated brains, which, according
to the thermoregulatory theory of yawning, stay cool via a heat exchange
with the air drawn in during a yawn.
Gallup describes the findings as follows:
"This provides additional support for the view that the mechanisms
controlling the expression of yawning are involved in thermoregulatory
physiology. Despite numerous theories posited in the past few decades,
very little experimental research has been done to uncover the
biological function of yawning, and there is still no consensus about
its purpose among the dozen or so researchers studying the topic today.
"Enter the brain cooling, or thermoregulatory, hypothesis, which
proposes that yawning is triggered by increases in brain temperature,
and that the physiological consequences of a yawn act to promote brain
cooling. I participated in a study [published in Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
in September 2010] that confirmed this dynamic after we observed
changes in the brain temperature of rats before and after the animals
yawned. The cooling effect of yawning is thought to result from enhanced
blood flow to the brain caused by stretching of the jaw, as well as
countercurrent heat exchange with the ambient air that accompanies the
deep inhalation.
"According to the brain cooling hypothesis, it is the temperature of
the ambient air that gives a yawn its utility. Thus yawning should be
counterproductive -- and therefore suppressed -- in ambient temperatures
at or exceeding body temperature because taking a deep inhalation of
air would not promote cooling. In other words, there should be a
'thermal window' or a relatively narrow range of ambient temperatures in
which to expect highest rates of yawning.
"To test this theory in humans, I worked with Omar Eldakar to conduct
a field-observational experiment that explored the relationship between
ambient temperature and yawning frequency. We measured the incidence of
yawning among people outdoors during the summer and winter months in
Arizona. Summer conditions provided temperatures that matched or
slightly exceeded body temperature (an average of 98.6 degrees
Fahrenheit) with relatively low humidity, while winter conditions
exhibited milder temperatures (71 degrees Fahrenheit on average) and
slightly higher humidity. We randomly selected 160 pedestrians (80 for
each season) and, because yawning is contagious, had them view images of
people yawning.
"Our study accordingly showed a higher incidence of yawning across
seasons when ambient temperatures were lower, even after statistically
controlling for other features such as humidity, time spent outside and
the amount of sleep the night before. Nearly half of the people in the
winter session yawned, as opposed to less than a quarter of summer
participants.
"Furthermore, when analyzing data for each season separately, we
observed that yawning was related to the length of time a person spent
outside exposed to the climate conditions. This was particularly true
during the summer when the proportion of individuals yawning dropped
significantly as the length of time spent outside increased prior to
testing. Nearly 40 percent of participants yawned within the first five
minutes outside, but the percentage of summertime yawners dropped to
less than 10 percent thereafter. An inverse effect was observed in the
winter, but the proportion of people who yawned increased only slightly
for those who spent more than five minutes outdoors.
"This is the first report to show that yawning frequency varies from
season to season. The applications of this research are intriguing, not
only in terms of basic physiological knowledge, but also for better
understanding diseases and conditions, such as multiple sclerosis or
epilepsy, that are accompanied by frequent yawning and thermoregulatory
dysfunction. These results provide additional support for the view that
excessive yawning may be used as a diagnostic tool for identifying
instances of diminished thermoregulation."
This research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health. /Science Daily/
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