2016
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150459
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Shemore thanhe: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion inHomo sapiens

Abstract: Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more developed in women than in men. Because there is growing evidence that yawn contagion is an empathy-based phenomenon, we expect that the female bias in the empathic abilities reflects on a gender skew in the responsiveness to others’ yawns. We verified this assumption by applying a linear model on a dataset gathered during a 5 year period of naturalistic observations on humans. Gender, age and social bond were include… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(59 citation statements)
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References 90 publications
(149 reference statements)
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“…We acknowledge that yawns appear to vary throughout the day and according to one's chronotype (Zilli et al 2007). Further, we acknowledge that individual differences associated with social awareness or mentalizing also bear upon one's tendency to contagiously yawn (Bartholomew and Cirulli 2014;Demuru and Palagi 2012;Norscia et al 2016;Norscia and Palagi 2011;Palagi et al 2009;Platek et al 2003;Rundle et al 2015). We acknowledge that some existing experimental protocols are used to mitigate the influence of social factors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…We acknowledge that yawns appear to vary throughout the day and according to one's chronotype (Zilli et al 2007). Further, we acknowledge that individual differences associated with social awareness or mentalizing also bear upon one's tendency to contagiously yawn (Bartholomew and Cirulli 2014;Demuru and Palagi 2012;Norscia et al 2016;Norscia and Palagi 2011;Palagi et al 2009;Platek et al 2003;Rundle et al 2015). We acknowledge that some existing experimental protocols are used to mitigate the influence of social factors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…And yet, perception is a necessary but not sufficient explanation: it is known that yawn contagion is primarily a function of social considerations. We are far more likely to yawn to close family and friends, than we are to strangers or acquaintances (Demuru and Palagi 2012;Norscia and Palagi 2011); indeed, empathy, theory of mind, self-awareness, and psychopathy-related traits are all associated with one's tendency to yawn contagiously (Bartholomew and Cirulli 2014;Norscia et al 2016;Palagi et al 2009;Platek et al 2003;Rundle et al 2015). Contagious yawning has been observed in non-humans, and is typically associated with that species' social abilities (Demuru and Palagi 2012;Gallup et al 2015;Madsen et al 2013;Palagi et al 2009;Romero et al 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Humans connect emotionally to one another through emotional contagion facilitated by RFM (Zajonc, ) a coupling that is probably also present in other animals (Palagi, Nicotra, & Cordoni, ; Nakahashi & Ohtsuki, ). RFM also relates to fine‐tuning interactions, indicating intention, strengthening social bonds through shared positive emotions (Davila Ross et al, 2008; Palagi et al, ), and may also lead to mimicking each other in synchronous performances (Anderson, Myowa‐Yamakoshi, & Matsuzawa, 2004; Gladstone & Parker, ; Miles, Griffiths, Richardson, & Macrae, ; Norscia, Demuru, & Palagi, ; Provine, ; Romero, Ito, Saito, & Hasegawa, ). Synchronizing behavior, including facial behavior, may function to bind partners more closely and to increase affiliation or be an expression thereof (Haidt, Seder, & Kesebir, ; Hattori, Tomonaga, & Matsuzawa, ; Paukner, Suomi, Visalberghi, & Ferrari, ; Romero et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%