ScienceIQ.com

What Is a Bruise?

A bruise is a deposit of blood under the skin. It flows from tiny capillaries that break when you bump your shin on the furniture or take the batter's pop fly in the eye. The injury starts out looking red because of hemoglobin, the red pigment in red blood cells. As blood pools under the skin, light striking the red hemoglobin bounces back and ...

Continue reading...

WhatIsaBruise
Geology

The Hydrology of Drought

A drought is a period of drier-than-normal conditions that results in water-related problems. Precipitation (rain or snow) falls in uneven patterns across the country. The amount of precipitation at a ... Continue reading

TheHydrologyofDrought
Geology

Was That The Big One? Depends On How You Measured It.

The severity of an earthquake can be expressed in terms of both intensity and magnitude. However, the two terms are quite different, and they are often confused. Intensity is based on the observed ... Continue reading

TheBigOne
Biology

We Live In Two Distinct Visual Worlds

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live on a planet where all the colors were different from what you're used to? Actually, you already have a lot of experience with two different worlds ... Continue reading

VisualWorlds
Geology

Fossil Energy - The Basics

Contrary to what many people believe, fossil fuels are not the remains of dead dinosaurs. In fact, most of the fossil fuels we find today were formed millions of years before the first dinosaurs. ... Continue reading

FossilEnergyTheBasics

Why Are Yawns Contagious?

YawnsContagiousLots of animals yawn. It's a primitive reflex. Humans even begin to yawn before birth, starting about 11 weeks after conception. But contagious yawning doesn't start until about age 1 or 2. And even though yawning is used as a social signal by other animals, there's no clear evidence that yawning is contagious for other animals the way it is for humans. Your cat can yawn, and you may yawn when you see her yawn; she, however, won't yawn if she sees you do so.

A recent report in the journal Cognitive Brain Research links yawning to the evolution of the human capacity for empathy. The authors of this report hypothesized that the contagious effect of a yawn might have something to do with theory of mind - the ability to infer other people's thoughts, feelings, and intentions from their actions. Theory of mind is what allows us to have empathy - to imagine what it's like to walk in another guy's shoes- and it's also closely tied to another uniquely human skill, self-awareness.

How would you test the hypothesis that contagious yawning really does result from a particularly human cluster of abilities underlying empathy and self-awareness? One way might be to see if people who are particularly prone to 'catching' a yawn after seeing someone yawn on a video also score high on measures of self-awareness and the ability to draw inferences about other people's mental states. In this recently published experiment, that is exactly what turned out to be the case. In other words, in several tests, people more susceptible to contagious yawns ranked higher in self-awareness and cognitive skills related to empathy. Who would have imagined that something as commonplace as a yawn could provide insight into such a noble human impulse? It just goes to show that if you pay attention and ask the right questions, even most boring things in life can yield new insights from time to time.