Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Chimps catch yawns from cartoon

Humans empathize with fictional displays of behavior, including cartoons

Image: Chimp cartoon
Emory University
By copying the pattern of real chimps' yawning, researchers designed animations that in turn caused the real chimps to yawn.
INTERACTIVE
Image: A ticklish rat.
Good times of the animal kind
Few humans would disagree that a good chuckle every now and again feels good. Well, monkeys, dogs, fish and other animials get a kick out of life as well.
10 ways to waste time on the Web9 travel spots for geeks10 odd currency facts6 paths to coupled financial bliss
Special feature
Image: Clipping coupons
10 tips to be a better coupon sleuth
Want to save now? 10 Tips columnist Laura T. Coffey offers advice to help you upgrade your electronic and paper coupon skills.
FirstPerson
Gallery: Your latest splurges
Despite tough economic times, readers share photos of recent big-ticket purchases.
  One man’s trash is another man’s house
Nov. 24: Each year, builders in the U.S. generate 31 million tons of construction waste. NBC’s Anne Thompson has a story about how one man has come up with a way to find new life for some of that material.

INTERACTIVE
The 10 smartest animals
How do humans compare to other intelligent creatures?
updated 11:03 a.m. ET Sept. 16, 2009

In a bizarre twist on the odd phenomenon of contagious yawning, chimps have been found to yawn when they watch an animated chimp do so.

Scientists don't know for sure why yawning is contagious in humans, but the phenomenon is recognized as real. Researchers suspect it has to do with empathy and is therefore similar to our propensity to laugh (or cry) with others. Other primates are known to catch yawns, and last year a study revealed that dogs can catch a human yawn.

Humans, meanwhile, were known to catch yawns from animated characters.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

“We know humans often empathize with fictional displays of behavior, including those in cartoons and video games, even though the displays are obviously artificial,” said lead researcher Matthew Campbell of the Yerkes National Primate Research Center at Emory University. “Humans experience emotional engagement with characters, empathizing with happiness, sadness or other emotions displayed by the characters.

But chimps?

To better understand why humans relate to artificial characters in this way, Campbell and colleagues decided to study chimps, among our closest relatives. They showed the animals 3D animations of chimpanzees yawning. The real chimpanzees yawned significantly more in response to the yawning animations than they did to the animations showing other controlled mouth movements, the researchers said.

“Because they showed only involuntary responses to the animations, we believe they empathized with the animations, while knowing they were artificial," Campbell said. "This is important for us to know because we can present animations in future experiments knowing the chimpanzees will identify with the animations as if they are other chimpanzees. This opens up the possibility of using animations in many other types of studies."

The findings were detailed last week in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

© 2009 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Sponsored links

Resource guide