Professor Andrew Gallup featured in Science: 'Why yawns are contagious—in all kinds of animals'

Professor Andrew Gallup featured in Science: 'Why yawns are contagious—in all kinds of animals'

Published:
Friday, May 27, 2022 - 10:36
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Dr. Andrew Gallup

Science

"Yawning probably arose with the evolution of jawed fishes 400 million or so years ago, says Andrew Gallup, an evolutionary biologist at State University of New York Polytechnic Institute who has spent years trying to figure out why we yawn. In a paper published this month in Animal Behavior, he reports some evidence for how contagious yawns might have evolved to keep us safe. Science chatted with Gallup about why yawning is ubiquitous—and useful. This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

"Q: First, let’s address a long-standing myth: Does yawning increase blood oxygen levels?

"A: No. Despite continued belief, research has explicitly tested that hypothesis and the results have concluded that breathing and yawning are controlled by different mechanisms. For example, there are really interesting cases of yawning in marine mammals, where the yawning occurs while the animal is submerged underwater and therefore not breathing."

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