Monday, March 13, 2006

more alcohol = lowered productivity (a blog expose)

Contagious yawning, the onset of a yawn triggered by seeing, hearing, reading, or thinking about another person yawn is a well-documented phenomenon. The mechanisms that drive contagious yawning are as yet unknown, but there is recent evidence of a link between contagious yawning and self-processing that is negatively impacted by schizotypal personality traits. The neural substrates involved in contagious yawning, however, are unknown. Here, using fMRI, we show that viewing someone yawn evokes unique neural activity in the posterior cingulate and precuneus. Because of the role these areas play in self-processing, our findings provide further support for the hypothesis that contagious yawning may be part of a neural network involved in empathy.

3 comments:

Evil Biologist said...

True dat.
what is the reference for this article?
fMRI measures blood flow, not neural activity.

im lauf der zeit. said...

blood flowing to areas of neural activity. it's an abstract, buddy.

Vagrunt said...

AP covers Science so well ;)