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If seeing someone yawn makes you yawn too, you’re not alone: contagious yawning is an automatic social-brain response. The twist is that the effect can get stronger with closeness and empathy.
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If seeing someone yawn makes you yawn too, you’re not alone: contagious yawning is an automatic social-brain response. The twist is that the effect can get stronger with closeness and empathy.
The “I’m right-brained” cliché sounds neat, but the brain does most things together. Language, music, logic, creativity—spread across networks. It’s less labels, more balance.
A scent can drop you into childhood in a second because smell pathways connect closely to emotion and memory hubs. One perfume can sharpen a scene you hadn’t recalled in years.
Yawns can be contagious for a reason: the brain can ‘simulate’ what it sees. The mirror neuron idea links empathy and learning in a single mechanism.
Ever notice you invent an explanation instead of simply saying “I don’t want to”? The brain likes to justify rejection to reduce social cost. Sometimes the excuse protects the relationship, not you.
When one clip instantly becomes another, “five minutes” can turn into an hour. Without a clear finish line, the brain struggles to stop. Infinite feeds remove natural brakes.
Remembering isn’t taking a memory off the shelf and returning it unchanged—the brain updates it slightly each time. That’s why details you’re ‘sure’ about can drift. Memory is alive, not fixed.
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