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 nonhuman 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 ...
Contrary to spontaneous yawning, which is widespread in vertebrates and probably evolutionary ancien...
Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more develo...
Social psychologists often consider race to be a marker of in- or out-group status. When looking at ...
Contagious yawning differs from spontaneous yawning because it occurs when an individual yawns in r...
Various studies and researchers have proposed a link between contagious yawning and empathy, yet the...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Many diverse species yawn, suggesting ancient evolutionary roots. While yawning is widespread, the o...
In humans, the distribution of yawn contagion is shaped by social closeness with strongly bonded pai...
In humans, the susceptibility to yawn contagion has been theoretically and empirically related to ou...
Humans express facial mimicry across a variety of actions. This article explores a distinct example,...
The ability to share others’ emotions, or empathy, is crucial for complex social interactions. Clini...
Contagious yawning, in which yawning is triggered involuntarily when we observe another person yawn,...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Considerable variation exists in the contagiousness of yawning, and numerous studies have been condu...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Contrary to spontaneous yawning, which is widespread in vertebrates and probably evolutionary ancien...
Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more develo...
Social psychologists often consider race to be a marker of in- or out-group status. When looking at ...
Contagious yawning differs from spontaneous yawning because it occurs when an individual yawns in r...
Various studies and researchers have proposed a link between contagious yawning and empathy, yet the...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Many diverse species yawn, suggesting ancient evolutionary roots. While yawning is widespread, the o...
In humans, the distribution of yawn contagion is shaped by social closeness with strongly bonded pai...
In humans, the susceptibility to yawn contagion has been theoretically and empirically related to ou...
Humans express facial mimicry across a variety of actions. This article explores a distinct example,...
The ability to share others’ emotions, or empathy, is crucial for complex social interactions. Clini...
Contagious yawning, in which yawning is triggered involuntarily when we observe another person yawn,...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Considerable variation exists in the contagiousness of yawning, and numerous studies have been condu...
The contagious aspect of yawning is a well-known phenomenon that exhibits variation in the human pop...
Contrary to spontaneous yawning, which is widespread in vertebrates and probably evolutionary ancien...
Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more develo...
Social psychologists often consider race to be a marker of in- or out-group status. When looking at ...