Time to Read: 5 minutes
We all know that yawning is contagious but did you know how yawning affects your hearing?
We take a look at:
You might have been told that we yawn to get more oxygen into our bodies, but more recent research has shown that’s not the case.
What we do know about yawning is actually quite surprising. Yawning helps us wake up - especially when it is accompanied by stretching.
Strangely enough, it has been suggested that yawning might help regulate brain temperature.
Researchers observed a rise in brain temperature prior to yawning, with a decrease in temperature seen after the yawn.
Increased yawning rates are seen when fevers have been experimentally induced, which does suggest a correlation between body warming and yawning. But there is no clear evidence it leads to body cooling – just that body warming seems to be a trigger for yawning.
Yawning communicates tiredness and perhaps boredom.
There are ways to stop yourself from yawning, but we’ll also look at places where yawning is actually helpful.
Just about every animal yawns but only few creatures are ‘social yawners’ - people, chimpanzees, and even dogs.
Scientists aren’t sure why yawning is contagious, but they believe it might be related to being social creatures and we do it as a form of empathy building. Oddly enough, the old we get, the less susceptible we are to the contagious yawn.
When you yawn, both the tensor tympani muscle and the stapedius muscles are tightened. Both these muscles control the amount of sound entering your ear. In short, yawning creates a pressure difference between the inner ear and the surroundings so the eardrum vibrates freely(because it requires similar air pressure on both sides to vibrate properly and convey sound waves.
Swallowing or yawning opens the Eustachian tube and allows air to flow into or out of the middle ear to help equalise pressure either side of the eardrum.
If you become conscious of pressure in your ears, affecting a yawn will make your ears more comfortable.
Other alternatives to try when flying include chewing gum, swallowing during ascent and descent to activate the muscles that open the Eustachian tubes. You can also try blowing your nose gently with your mouth closed while pinching your nostrils.
You can wear your hearing aids when you fly - and you should, to ensure you hear any important transit or safety information.
We have some great information here on how to travel with hearing aids.