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Auditory Contagious Yawning Is Highest Between Friends and Family Members: Support to the Emotional Bias Hypothesis

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Contagious yawning differs from spontaneous yawning because it occurs when an individual yawns in response to someone else’s yawn. In Homo sapiens and some non-human primates contagious yawning is higher between strongly than weakly bonded individuals. Up to date, it is still unclear whether this social asymmetry underlies emotional contagion (a basic form of empathy preferentially involving familiar individuals) as predicted by the Emotional Bias Hypothesis (EBH) or is linked to a top-down, selective visual attention bias (with selective attention being preferentially directed toward familiar faces) as predicted by the Attentional Bias Hypothesis (ABH). To verify whether the visual attentional bias explained the yawn contagion bias or not, in this study, we considered only yawns that could be heard but not seen by potential responders (auditory yawns). Around 294 of auditory yawning occurrences were extrapolated from over 2000 yawning bouts collected in free ranging humans for over nine years. Via GLMM, we tested the effect of intrinsic features (i.e., gender and age) and social bond (from strangers to family members) on yawn. The individual identity of the subjects (trigger and potential responder) was included as random factor. The social bond significantly predicted the occurrence of auditory yawn contagion, which was highest between friends and family members. A gender bias was also observed, with women responding most frequently to others’ yawns and men being responded to most frequently by others. These results confirm that social bond is per se one of the main drivers of the differences in yawn contagion rates between individuals in support of the EBH of yawn contagion.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
emotional contagion, bottom-up attention, selective attention, top-down attention, yawn contagion, mimicry
Elenco autori:
Ivan Norscia, Anna Zanoli, Marco Gamba, Elisabetta Palagi
Autori di Ateneo:
GAMBA Marco
NORSCIA Ivan
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unito.it/handle/2318/1735289
Link al Full Text:
https://iris.unito.it/retrieve/handle/2318/1735289/600768/fpsyg-11-00442.pdf
Pubblicato in:
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Journal
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URL

https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00442
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