Imagine a yawn. You stretch your jaws open in a wide gape, take a deep inward breath, followed by a shorter exhalation, and end by closing your jaws…You have just joined vertebrates everywhere in one of the animal kingdom's most ancient rites" (Provine, 2005 p. 532).Yawning is a primitive and complex stereotyped motor response that requires the involvement of facial, oral, laryngeal, pharyngeal, thoracic and abdominal muscles (Provine, 2005). Among vertebrates, spontaneous yawning is a ubiquitous and evolutionarily conserved behaviour (Provine, 2005;Walusinski & Deputte, 2004). This activity seems to serve important neurophysiological functions such as brain cooling and enhancement of blood flow to the skull, which, in turn, could stimulate cortical arousal and state change (for an extensive review see Massen & Gallup, 2017).Spontaneous yawning is driven by physiological stimuli, it is widespread throughout the animal kingdom and it follows a daily fluctuation (Giganti & Zilli, 2011;Massen & Gallup, 2017). On the other hand, contagious yawning, an involuntarily action induced by viewing or listening to others' yawns (Provine, 2005), is socially driven and must follow a different 'pathway' compared to spontaneous yawning.Indeed, contagious yawning shows some differences in daily fluctuation (Giganti & Zilli, 2011) and it is not widespread across