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Curious Behavior

Yawning, Laughing, Hiccupping, and Beyond

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Robert Provine ventures into the realm of often-overlooked human behaviors like hiccups, coughs, yawns, and sneezes, revealing their evolutionary significance and their role in understanding the human brain. These instinctive acts serve as valuable insights into our species' uniqueness. Among them, yawning stands out for its contagious nature—just reading the word can trigger the response. Often mistaken for signs of sleepiness or boredom, yawning offers clues about our social development and empathy, highlighting our instinctual connections as social beings. Other behaviors also provide intriguing insights: tickling may help program personhood in robots, while coughing manifests in various forms—musical, medical, and social. Even farting and belching contribute to our understanding of speech evolution. Additionally, prenatal behaviors defy postnatal logic, showcasing the complexity of human development. These earthy actions define "Homo sapiens" alongside language and tool use. Provine encourages readers to engage in self-experiments, such as tickling their feet or logging laughter, making these simple investigations suitable for science projects or academic research. In exploring these behaviors, we discover that small science can lead to significant insights.

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Curious Behavior, Robert R. Provine

Langue
Année de publication
2014
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Titre
Curious Behavior
Sous-titre
Yawning, Laughing, Hiccupping, and Beyond
Langue
Anglais
Publié
2014
Format
souple
Pages
288
ISBN10
0674284135
ISBN13
9780674284135
Séries
Évaluation
2,5 sur 5
Description
Robert Provine ventures into the realm of often-overlooked human behaviors like hiccups, coughs, yawns, and sneezes, revealing their evolutionary significance and their role in understanding the human brain. These instinctive acts serve as valuable insights into our species' uniqueness. Among them, yawning stands out for its contagious nature—just reading the word can trigger the response. Often mistaken for signs of sleepiness or boredom, yawning offers clues about our social development and empathy, highlighting our instinctual connections as social beings. Other behaviors also provide intriguing insights: tickling may help program personhood in robots, while coughing manifests in various forms—musical, medical, and social. Even farting and belching contribute to our understanding of speech evolution. Additionally, prenatal behaviors defy postnatal logic, showcasing the complexity of human development. These earthy actions define "Homo sapiens" alongside language and tool use. Provine encourages readers to engage in self-experiments, such as tickling their feet or logging laughter, making these simple investigations suitable for science projects or academic research. In exploring these behaviors, we discover that small science can lead to significant insights.