From humans to animals we all have one thing in common, we all yawn! Although, it's still a mystery why we yawn. What is a yawn and why do we do it? Narrated by: Dr. Moo.
yes, this is exactly where the problem is. she is way too busy and we can't be sure the next video has any narrative at all. By the way, where is Nate from the void? I mean, at this point, any voice will do
Science communicators using scientific terminology improperly to be more easily understood by the laymen is really just going to create more confusion.
I keep forgetting that Thor isn't here anymore. I brace myself for the energy which does...... Doesn't come I mean I get it and I appreciate because science for still bringing out content but It's just not in the same in the void.
Yeah, now that they can't exploit him anymore, just trying to shit out any old content is pretty admirable, that's true. 100% in agreement with you. Everything this failing company is doing to try to stay afloat makes perfect sense, when you consider they refused to pay their #1 asset so the CEO could have four secretaries. It's.. Ya know. Science. Kyle won't make it in his own, it's not like his first video hit 100k views in three hours. They were the channel not him. Obviously. Just look at the dislike ratio! That's almost 50/50, they're doing fine.
@@sonictheporcipine yeah, they done fucked up. Dropped the ball, pretty hard by pretending this channel would go anywhere without Kyle. Set themselves back around 13 months, which is an eternity in the business world. Remember, that's just to recover. Then they'd have to make up for those 13 lost months..... Or, like adults, they could've paid him a fair wage, given him benefits etc. He was just a "freelancer" though.
@@GrubbJunker that entirely depends where she attained said doctorate. I'm very interested in which diploma mill she paid her way through, if she doesn't know the difference between a theory and a hypothesis. Maybe I can throw a couple of bucks their way, and get myself a few diplomas.
@@GrubbJunker lol, that makes perfect sense. Being from NJ and never having even heard of it.... 80% acceptance rate, and $50k tuition. Hmmmm.... Just saying, that's a diploma mill.
Having someone actually talking the lines instead of making us just read it with BLARING MUSIC going on is a huge improvement. Thank you. I look forward to more like this.
She used it correctly. A hypothesis is made before any data has been gathered. What Dr. Moo referenced is a theory because it’s based on existing evidence about what we know about how yawning affects the body. Laypeople don’t know that a theory and a hypothesis are two different things. Arrogant laypeople (like the guys lecturing a NASA scientist about terminology) don’t know that it’s even more complicated than “they are two different things.”
@@Antenox "A scientific theory is an explanation of an aspect of the natural world that can be repeatedly tested and verified in accordance with the scientific method, using accepted protocols of observation, measurement, and evaluation of results. Where possible, theories are tested under controlled conditions in an experiment. In circumstances not amenable to experimental testing, theories are evaluated through principles of abductive reasoning. Established scientific theories have withstood rigorous scrutiny and embody scientific knowledge"
@@MrKuba0506 Note the terminology: "ESTABLISHED scientific theories have withstood rigorous scrutiny." That means there are theories that are NOT established. And the theory Dr. Moo cited is exactly that type of theory. Here is the distinction between a theory and a hypothesis: - Theory: "Yawnings might happen because the body wants to increase heart rate and oxygen in the blood" - Hypothesis: "IF this theory is correct, THEN heart rate and oxygen will increase when you yawn. True or false? Let's test." What Dr. Moo cited IS indeed a theory. The only thing that is required for a theory to be a theory is that it is an explanation that is consistent with data that has already been gathered in past studies/experiments/etc. Theories that are "just theories" are theories that aren't yet strongly supported with evidence, but which still provide an explanation of the mechanisms. But that still makes them distinct from hypotheses, which are predictions of outcomes based on the mechanism supplied by the theory.
A fetus also yawns while still in the womb so that seems to undercut the idea that it has to to with oxygen levels or brain temperature. If it had to do with temperature one would also expect yawning to be more prevalent in warmer regions.
@@MorgothBauglir13579 There is no air inside the womb, (oxygen is supplied by the mother through the umbilical cord) therefore air-cooling the brain through yawning is not possible.
My theory: Its your body trying to move, stretch and be more active when you aren't being active enough to justify being awake. That's why you yawn at meetings, school or when you're watching a boring movie. Also when you are getting ready to go to bed but you have other things to do first. You typically stretch when you yawn. You stretch a lot of muscles not just in your face, but the rest of your body as well (arms, back and even legs and feet). It's your body trying to move and stretch and perhaps even breathe more when you are being stagnant but resisting the urge to sleep.
Reminds me when an ex boss told me that customers didn't come for me they came for the food. When I left all my customers left too. And not they closed.
I was looking up this specific reason and happened to find you covering over the facts n stuff,immediately clicked because you make learning fun and entertaining
I'm glad Dr. Moo is here in voice, but if y'all gonna keep doing Because Science without Kyle, can we just get the Because Space portion with Moo? Because Science died when you let Kyle go.
@@MegaShepardsPie she isn't ANY kind of doctor mate, buying a diploma from an expensive University with essentially no campus and an 85% acceptance rate isn't exactly worth much..
For me the important part is the narration. Don't get me wrong, I miss Kyle and respect Dr. Moo for stepping up to fill a role, but as a busy father with a full time job, I'm usually not watching the video, and more listening. Don't give up guys.
Fun fact: dogs also yawn when they are stressed or scared, specially during interaction with other dogs. It's very common to see a dog yawning when they are put together with a new dog they are not familiar with and are showing other fear behaviors. I believe that may also happens with humans. It does with me at least. I'm not rly good with social interactions, and I noticed that when Im nervour or unconfortable around someone I start yawning nonstopping. It's possible that this is just a way of my body trying to destress
Shouldn't say "just a theory". Call it a hypothesis, instead. Saying it's just a theory confuses people into thinking other theories are just guesses instead of the immensely studied and peer reviewed subject matter that they are.
for sure not but 1) they need a known voice/character since Kyle's quick leave and 2) she can quickly record the audio for such an episode in her lunchbreak and the rest gets edited
I see you finally got a voice that's nice. Just a little note the background music is a little bit overpowering drowning out at times the person's voice.
"The reason why a yawn is contagious is because of empathy" makes no sense to me, because then shouldn't we mimick every other move someone does because of empathy? We do that only for yawns so there must be a reason that holds its own
Alexandre Géhin> We do that only for yawns so there must be a reason that holds its own Not really, we tend to laugh when we see someone laughing, we feel sad when we see someone cry, we tense up when we see someone looking scared, we get alert when we see someone angry.
I thought the leading hypothesis on the reason for yawning was temperature control, and based on that then the reason yawning is contagious is "if I'm near them and their brain is too hot then my brain must be too hot."
i've always heard it was our circadian rhythms, this way as a populace of nomadic peoples we would all be on the same timeline of sleep and wake. but then again, I'm a boomer so what do i know
It was poorly stated. Many animals are social, but humans are INCREDIBLY social. One of the reasons is biomechanical perception; when we see a person do something, the neurons we would use to do the same thing fire very faintly. They fire nowhere near enough to cause us to do the same thing, but we have a very direct and intuitive perception of other humans' states. This mirroring of neuronal states, as well as the vast number of neurons dedicated to facial expression and our preoccupation with sight, enable us to be intensely social. So much so that we respond very well to symmetry and not well to asymmetry. If you duplicate someone's stance, pose and mode of expression they will tend to enjoy your company more, and the opposite for the opposite. It could be that whatever autonomic system that yawning is wired to is on a hair trigger and just the smallest tickle of seeing someone else yawn (or imagining it) is enough to set it off.
Huh. Much better - I can see you noticed the tips mentioned in previous comments. This video was way easier to watch and significantly less boring. I mean you know people will constant nag about BS loosing the hair - but you've made a step in the right direction. Music varied, more artwork less reading words, and the lass narrating was clear and concise!
Who wrote this script? "It's just a theory"? Seriously? The writers need to know the difference between a scientific theory and a colloquial theory. "It's just a theory" should never come out of a science educator's mouth.
Though technically a theory is just a scientifically supported explanation for something, so there can be many theories that are not strongly supported, but not disproved, by evidence. So while in Physics and chemistry "just a theory" would be blasphemy, in psychology, biology, and other fields, a theory can be "Just a theory" as there are still other equal (not strongly supported) theories; thus, the phrase is less blasphemous in certain field like biology where application may be prioritized. And yes, I am a stir-crazy, bored person with no life and way too much free time.
@@IamI3rian You seem to be confused on the major difference between a hypothesis and a theory. A theory is tested while a hypothesis is yet to be tested. For examples of theories that are not strongly supported, might I suggest taking a psychology 101 course.
@@whiterabbit47 no no, you can't tell me what a theory is, and then tell me to go look at "theories" that aren't theories. A "theory that isn't tested" is by your own definition (and everyone else's) a hypothesis, and not a theory. If I didn't know better, I'd say you're really bored, and looking for some trouble, because no one alive would say... "this is red, but this blue thing here, it's also red. Except blue is never red., and red isn't real. It's all blue." That's you. Go get some sleep, or food... Talk to your girl, whatever you need. You're so done, you're leather. Take a minute, ok? Get yourself together. I won't ever tell anyone you said these crazy things. We both know you're better than that, just pick it up, mate. I'm here, if something is so awful for you that you may need an ear to lean on or a shoulder to cry into. 😁 Either way, you're broken, and not working correctly.
You don't get a large amount of gas exchange to replace O2. When you yawn you stretch the muscles in the throat which causes the one side of your sinuses to drain. Several times a day the brain turns this function on , were one side of your sinuses drains and the other fills up with mucus. This is done to regulate the temperature of the brain,by changing the insulating nature of the sinuses. To test this gently massage your sinuses if you hear a clicking sound you should feel mucus draining , at that point you should yawn .( clicking sound is made by air bubbles in your sinuses collapsing. The muscles stretched open the nasopharynx aperture to facilitate drainage. The reason you yawn when bored is that lactic acid is a stress and fatigue poison ,high levels of lactic acid cause the brain to over heat ,so the brain will try to cool things off using the above technique. If you don't believe me ask a sinus sufferer.
hmmm they are listening, and avancing the style before it was the same repetitive part of the song, then it changed to the whole song on loop, and now there even narration
I think the way to find out why we yawn is in magic mushrooms. when I'm tripping on shrooms, every time I think it's wearing out, I yawn, and the high returns even more intense than before
My theory is that when we sleep we take in more oxygen and when we wake up in the morning we yawn for a kick start to the day and we yawn at night or whenever we normally go to sleep because it's our body saying ok this is our normal time to fall asleep and the empathy thing might not even be a choice for people it is most likely for us to yawn when someone else yawns because it is a instinct of some sort or a involuntary response but that's just a theory a science theory but hey what do I know I am just a kid in high school trying to graduate
Maaaan without Thor it just doesn’t feel the same
Yup now it's BS for a reason lol (iKeed!)
Expected opinions tbh
😭need him baaack him being out of the void isn’t the same
@@seansolo5318 He made a new channel that he named after his name, Kyle Hill.
Get over it
Just listening to this made me yawn
At least we got some voice narrating it. Never ever ask me to read the text on the screen again
That's Dr. Moo, not just some voice. Too bad she's too busy with her day job to narrate all the videos. This channel needs a new full time host.
yes, this is exactly where the problem is. she is way too busy and we can't be sure the next video has any narrative at all. By the way, where is Nate from the void? I mean, at this point, any voice will do
I think you confused hypothesis for theory, calling something "just a theory"
I was just going to comment about this. You would think a "Science" channel would promote the correct terminology.
... A YAWN THEORY!
Science communicators using scientific terminology improperly to be more easily understood by the laymen is really just going to create more confusion.
...AAAAND CUT
@@jumpsh00ps I see what you did there ^^
I yawned just from hearing the word yawn so often
Same
same here, i yawned so much watching this
I did from reading the title...
Yapp
I keep forgetting that Thor isn't here anymore. I brace myself for the energy which does...... Doesn't come
I mean I get it and I appreciate because science for still bringing out content but It's just not in the same in the void.
Yeah, now that they can't exploit him anymore, just trying to shit out any old content is pretty admirable, that's true. 100% in agreement with you.
Everything this failing company is doing to try to stay afloat makes perfect sense, when you consider they refused to pay their #1 asset so the CEO could have four secretaries.
It's.. Ya know. Science. Kyle won't make it in his own, it's not like his first video hit 100k views in three hours. They were the channel not him. Obviously. Just look at the dislike ratio! That's almost 50/50, they're doing fine.
@@IamI3rian really? I was not aware of any of that.
@@sonictheporcipine yeah, they done fucked up.
Dropped the ball, pretty hard by pretending this channel would go anywhere without Kyle.
Set themselves back around 13 months, which is an eternity in the business world. Remember, that's just to recover. Then they'd have to make up for those 13 lost months.....
Or, like adults, they could've paid him a fair wage, given him benefits etc. He was just a "freelancer" though.
@@sonictheporcipine basically what Lame said.
Greed made them scuttle the ship, rather than pay the captain.
This is the first video without Thor I’ve seen I didn’t know that happened :c can we find him somewhere else? Is he still doing stuff?
Look, guys. You've had someone on camera for quite a while. Suddenly having disembodied voices won't work. Even if it's her.
Oh come on... She's a doctor. We promise.... Sure she doesn't know the difference between a theory and a hypothesis, but she totally is!
@@IamI3rian Well, she does have a PhD, so by definition that makes her a doctor. Not of medicine, of course, but a doctor nonetheless.
@@GrubbJunker that entirely depends where she attained said doctorate. I'm very interested in which diploma mill she paid her way through, if she doesn't know the difference between a theory and a hypothesis. Maybe I can throw a couple of bucks their way, and get myself a few diplomas.
@@IamI3rian Drexel University.
@@GrubbJunker lol, that makes perfect sense. Being from NJ and never having even heard of it.... 80% acceptance rate, and $50k tuition.
Hmmmm.... Just saying, that's a diploma mill.
Where is thor?:(
Over on the Kyle Hill channel now, where everyone should go subscribe
ua-cam.com/users/ScienceBasedLife
At asgard
Having someone actually talking the lines instead of making us just read it with BLARING MUSIC going on is a huge improvement. Thank you. I look forward to more like this.
*Gasp!* We have narration!.... that is a step in the right direction.
Why is Kyle not here?
*Because science*
ua-cam.com/users/ScienceBasedLife
Kyle has left the channel and stayed his own. Search for Kyle hill on UA-cam to find his new channel. It is great.
@@llanelwy why did he leave to being with
Actually, in this case, it's _not_ because science, it's because other, very non-science things.
@@mohammedyousef4005 they refused to pay him his fare share.
Using the word theory as hypothesis is a bit out of place in a video that's sort of scientific
On a channel called Because Science lmao
She used it correctly. A hypothesis is made before any data has been gathered. What Dr. Moo referenced is a theory because it’s based on existing evidence about what we know about how yawning affects the body.
Laypeople don’t know that a theory and a hypothesis are two different things. Arrogant laypeople (like the guys lecturing a NASA scientist about terminology) don’t know that it’s even more complicated than “they are two different things.”
@@Antenox "A scientific theory is an explanation of an aspect of the natural world that can be repeatedly tested and verified in accordance with the scientific method, using accepted protocols of observation, measurement, and evaluation of results. Where possible, theories are tested under controlled conditions in an experiment. In circumstances not amenable to experimental testing, theories are evaluated through principles of abductive reasoning. Established scientific theories have withstood rigorous scrutiny and embody scientific knowledge"
@@MrKuba0506 Note the terminology: "ESTABLISHED scientific theories have withstood rigorous scrutiny."
That means there are theories that are NOT established. And the theory Dr. Moo cited is exactly that type of theory.
Here is the distinction between a theory and a hypothesis:
- Theory: "Yawnings might happen because the body wants to increase heart rate and oxygen in the blood"
- Hypothesis: "IF this theory is correct, THEN heart rate and oxygen will increase when you yawn. True or false? Let's test."
What Dr. Moo cited IS indeed a theory. The only thing that is required for a theory to be a theory is that it is an explanation that is consistent with data that has already been gathered in past studies/experiments/etc. Theories that are "just theories" are theories that aren't yet strongly supported with evidence, but which still provide an explanation of the mechanisms. But that still makes them distinct from hypotheses, which are predictions of outcomes based on the mechanism supplied by the theory.
I miss Kyle
he's got his own channel now where he continues his work
Ngl, I kinda miss the videos before march on this channel
A fetus also yawns while still in the womb so that seems to undercut the idea that it has to to with oxygen levels or brain temperature. If it had to do with temperature one would also expect yawning to be more prevalent in warmer regions.
Also, the suggestion to engage our brain to reduce yawning contradicts the "Brain cooling theory" in my opinion.
How does that undercut the brain temperature thing exactly?
@@MorgothBauglir13579 There is no air inside the womb, (oxygen is supplied by the mother through the umbilical cord) therefore air-cooling the brain through yawning is not possible.
I yawned while watching this twice!!!😤😤😧😧
No offense, but I specifically subscribed for thor...
Search for Kyle Hill. It's his new channel..it's great.
@@IamI3rian bruh, you're a life saver. I thought he was gone for good!
@@uglynerfherder = )
No problem mate. He left because they weren't paying him right, since, ya know, he _IS_ the channel.
Bye
@@lamei3rain906 seriously?!?! That's ridiculous! Kyle is obviously what was carrying this channel... lol.
My theory: Its your body trying to move, stretch and be more active when you aren't being active enough to justify being awake. That's why you yawn at meetings, school or when you're watching a boring movie. Also when you are getting ready to go to bed but you have other things to do first.
You typically stretch when you yawn. You stretch a lot of muscles not just in your face, but the rest of your body as well (arms, back and even legs and feet). It's your body trying to move and stretch and perhaps even breathe more when you are being stagnant but resisting the urge to sleep.
Dr Moo! Thanks for the VO. Must better than just reading.
This video made me yawn a lot.
Why do we yawn?!
More like: Why Kyle left?
Ouch
F
F
Gotta get paid for carrying a failing company.
What "other symptoms?" I go through episodes where I'm yawning every 2 minutes or so. I always felt like that wasn't normal.
Somehow, it's only the episodes after Kyle left.
Because Science without Kyle is just B.S.
Pit Friend check his chanel kyle Hill
This comment deserves more love
Last time people asked for narration. Nice to see a company that listens to the audience!
Is voice of the void Nate still there? Let him narrative.
It isn't good and fun anymore to watch this without Kyle. He was the reason why I watched this channel
Simon van Tilburg kyle Hill is his new channel
@@JariakaBroekie888 i know. Just saying that this channel isn't so fun anymore without him
Reminds me when an ex boss told me that customers didn't come for me they came for the food. When I left all my customers left too. And not they closed.
I was looking up this specific reason and happened to find you covering over the facts n stuff,immediately clicked because you make learning fun and entertaining
THE KYLE, THOUGH
SELL HIM THE IP OR LET THE CHANNEL DIE.
They wouldn't pay him when he was there, you expect a fair deal for this broken channel now?
@@houndsharry8105 is that true? i thought what he was implying was that they wouldn't give him the creative freedom that he was (probably) requesting.
@@Someone-cr8cj i could see it being both
I'm glad Dr. Moo is here in voice, but if y'all gonna keep doing Because Science without Kyle, can we just get the Because Space portion with Moo? Because Science died when you let Kyle go.
She's too busy. We SWEAR, she's actually a doctor, so she has to set broken bones and stuff.
@@IamI3rian
Not all doctors are medical doctors...
@@IamI3rian She isn't that kind of doctor...
@@MegaShepardsPie she isn't ANY kind of doctor mate, buying a diploma from an expensive University with essentially no campus and an 85% acceptance rate isn't exactly worth much..
What kind of because science whitout Kyle is this?
Congratulations! You broke my favorite channel...
Literally yawned as soon as I clicked the video. They got me
That's simple
The invisible man comes to us to do his deeds
Fbi this comment right here
For me the important part is the narration. Don't get me wrong, I miss Kyle and respect Dr. Moo for stepping up to fill a role, but as a busy father with a full time job, I'm usually not watching the video, and more listening. Don't give up guys.
Fun fact: dogs also yawn when they are stressed or scared, specially during interaction with other dogs. It's very common to see a dog yawning when they are put together with a new dog they are not familiar with and are showing other fear behaviors.
I believe that may also happens with humans. It does with me at least. I'm not rly good with social interactions, and I noticed that when Im nervour or unconfortable around someone I start yawning nonstopping. It's possible that this is just a way of my body trying to destress
yawning is a social cue its part of our psyche just like blushing and crying
Shouldn't say "just a theory". Call it a hypothesis, instead. Saying it's just a theory confuses people into thinking other theories are just guesses instead of the immensely studied and peer reviewed subject matter that they are.
Yay Dr Moo!!!!
This person has a lovely voice. Interesting episode.
I can tell that this channel is gonna start sounding like a top 10 list countdown channel. It’s really not the same without Thor. It will never be...
This video made me yawn ovet 10 times rly... Good video!
Pretty sure dr moo won’t quit her day job to take over for kyle
for sure not but 1) they need a known voice/character since Kyle's quick leave and 2) she can quickly record the audio for such an episode in her lunchbreak and the rest gets edited
Nice video, easy vocabulary so everyone can understand.👍🏼
I see you finally got a voice that's nice. Just a little note the background music is a little bit overpowering drowning out at times the person's voice.
I yawned like a dozen times during this video
Me watching this video already seeing Vsauce's
I was JUST thinking about this
"The reason why a yawn is contagious is because of empathy" makes no sense to me, because then shouldn't we mimick every other move someone does because of empathy? We do that only for yawns so there must be a reason that holds its own
Alexandre Géhin> We do that only for yawns so there must be a reason that holds its own
Not really, we tend to laugh when we see someone laughing, we feel sad when we see someone cry, we tense up when we see someone looking scared, we get alert when we see someone angry.
@@user-vn7ce5ig1z you both have valid points because just reading this comment made me yawn... lol
I thought the leading hypothesis on the reason for yawning was temperature control, and based on that then the reason yawning is contagious is "if I'm near them and their brain is too hot then my brain must be too hot."
i've always heard it was our circadian rhythms, this way as a populace of nomadic peoples we would all be on the same timeline of sleep and wake. but then again, I'm a boomer so what do i know
It was poorly stated. Many animals are social, but humans are INCREDIBLY social. One of the reasons is biomechanical perception; when we see a person do something, the neurons we would use to do the same thing fire very faintly. They fire nowhere near enough to cause us to do the same thing, but we have a very direct and intuitive perception of other humans' states. This mirroring of neuronal states, as well as the vast number of neurons dedicated to facial expression and our preoccupation with sight, enable us to be intensely social. So much so that we respond very well to symmetry and not well to asymmetry. If you duplicate someone's stance, pose and mode of expression they will tend to enjoy your company more, and the opposite for the opposite. It could be that whatever autonomic system that yawning is wired to is on a hair trigger and just the smallest tickle of seeing someone else yawn (or imagining it) is enough to set it off.
You have no idea how many times I yawned watching this video.
I was half expecting her to say, "But that just a theory, a scientific theory!"
I can listen to her all day.
And they finally got a new narrator instead of using Kyle for their own gain! THANK YOU!
Huh. Much better - I can see you noticed the tips mentioned in previous comments. This video was way easier to watch and significantly less boring. I mean you know people will constant nag about BS loosing the hair - but you've made a step in the right direction. Music varied, more artwork less reading words, and the lass narrating was clear and concise!
I yawned as soon as I read the title for this video. Why is yawning "contagious?"
Was anyone else triggered to yawn like crazy by this video
I heard a theory that you yawn when you see other ppl yawn, you're brain sees that and thinks it might be a good time to yawn if they are
Who wrote this script? "It's just a theory"? Seriously? The writers need to know the difference between a scientific theory and a colloquial theory. "It's just a theory" should never come out of a science educator's mouth.
Nah, come on. We SWEAR she's an actual, honest to goodness doctor. Don't question it.
Though technically a theory is just a scientifically supported explanation for something, so there can be many theories that are not strongly supported, but not disproved, by evidence. So while in Physics and chemistry "just a theory" would be blasphemy, in psychology, biology, and other fields, a theory can be "Just a theory" as there are still other equal (not strongly supported) theories; thus, the phrase is less blasphemous in certain field like biology where application may be prioritized.
And yes, I am a stir-crazy, bored person with no life and way too much free time.
@@whiterabbit47 since you're so bored, go ahead and show me one of these biological "theories" that you insist exist, which are merely hypotheses.
@@IamI3rian You seem to be confused on the major difference between a hypothesis and a theory. A theory is tested while a hypothesis is yet to be tested. For examples of theories that are not strongly supported, might I suggest taking a psychology 101 course.
@@whiterabbit47 no no, you can't tell me what a theory is, and then tell me to go look at "theories" that aren't theories.
A "theory that isn't tested" is by your own definition (and everyone else's) a hypothesis, and not a theory.
If I didn't know better, I'd say you're really bored, and looking for some trouble, because no one alive would say...
"this is red, but this blue thing here, it's also red. Except blue is never red., and red isn't real. It's all blue."
That's you.
Go get some sleep, or food... Talk to your girl, whatever you need. You're so done, you're leather.
Take a minute, ok? Get yourself together. I won't ever tell anyone you said these crazy things.
We both know you're better than that, just pick it up, mate. I'm here, if something is so awful for you that you may need an ear to lean on or a shoulder to cry into. 😁
Either way, you're broken, and not working correctly.
You don't get a large amount of gas exchange to replace O2. When you yawn you stretch the muscles in the throat which causes the one side of your sinuses to drain. Several times a day the brain turns this function on , were one side of your sinuses drains and the other fills up with mucus. This is done to regulate the temperature of the brain,by changing the insulating nature of the sinuses. To test this gently massage your sinuses if you hear a clicking sound you should feel mucus draining , at that point you should yawn .( clicking sound is made by air bubbles in your sinuses collapsing. The muscles stretched open the nasopharynx aperture to facilitate drainage. The reason you yawn when bored is that lactic acid is a stress and fatigue poison ,high levels of lactic acid cause the brain to over heat ,so the brain will try to cool things off using the above technique. If you don't believe me ask a sinus sufferer.
Well done! I like her voice.
This video made me yawn 6 or 7 times. I begin to yawn if someone just talks about it.
Sorry folks, I subscribed to this channel because of Kyle. Can't really get into it without his energy
Music is too loud during narration
I never yawn. Others yawning doesn’t trigger a yawn for me… I only seem to yawn when I’m anxious. Anyone else?
I yawned 4 times just watching this 😂
hmmm they are listening, and avancing the style
before it was the same repetitive part of the song, then it changed to the whole song on loop, and now there even narration
If you didn’t yawn while watching this video, I refuse to believe you exist
I guess I am a figment of your imagination then
@@minecraftmaster2215 Maybe you are an alien
@Axel Huett Maybe
@@minecraftmaster2215 I’ll take that as a yes
@Axel Huett the world may never know
This is much better than 5 year old content
I think the way to find out why we yawn is in magic mushrooms. when I'm tripping on shrooms, every time I think it's wearing out, I yawn, and the high returns even more intense than before
Even talking about yawning is enough to trigger yawning!
Did your 5 year old nephew ask you this question? 😂
I think I yawned like 5 times during watching this video 😂 (not cause of boredom)
Mono microphone?
cellphone recording in the lunch break :D
I yawn even while cycling, bouldering and other high intense sport activities
Can i get a quick recap for why Kyle left?
Thank goodness there's a host.
We yawn because its a stretch for jaw and throat muscles. Singers also do it and it helps with headaches and regulate ear pressure.
Why does reading about yawning make you yawn? Especially when you read that reading about yawning makes you yawn?
Informative video, but the music is a little too loud.
My theory is that when we sleep we take in more oxygen and when we wake up in the morning we yawn for a kick start to the day and we yawn at night or whenever we normally go to sleep because it's our body saying ok this is our normal time to fall asleep and the empathy thing might not even be a choice for people it is most likely for us to yawn when someone else yawns because it is a instinct of some sort or a involuntary response but that's just a theory a science theory but hey what do I know I am just a kid in high school trying to graduate
this isnt the same without Kyle
“Get up and exercise”
- that’s why I’m yawning so much...
I kept yawning trough the whole video, does it mean it's boring?
Don’t get me wrong I love dr. Moo, but I’m really miss Kyle on this channel...
It’s not the same
I watched this at 11:30 in my bed. I never yawned more.
I yawned approximately 90 times while watching this,
You made me Yawn 10 times in 3min... and I didn't yawn before watching the video xD
I miss the intros filled with tips on how to make my hair look luxurious. I'm balding, but hey you never know.
when running around doesn't work and your yawning gets worse this might sound crazy but bare with me here. maybe, just maybe. it's time to go to bed.
Please do why do most dogs poop in a north/south-axis orientation 😚
She's not a real doctor, my dude.
I yawned 3 big times during this vid
This video made me yawn like 6 times man
It's a theory, a scientific theory! Thanks for watching
You can trigger a yawn by gathering saliva in your mouth, swallowing it, then taking 3 to 6 deep breaths while relaxing.
Did anyone else need to yawn looking at these images?
Hope kH brings Doc to the Facility one of these days.
The music was way too loud in the mix down. I couldn't hear Dr. Moo. 😕
Kyle Hill's new UA-cam channel below, for anyone who is wondering where he went:
ua-cam.com/users/ScienceBasedLife