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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.
Laughing releases endorphins in your body. That's why you feel good after watching comedy.
Memory isn’t a camera file—it’s a story rewritten each time. If a detail is missing, the brain can fill it with plausible pieces, and you may later trust the fill-in as real.
Goosebumps during music, a scene, or a sentence aren’t just about cold. The brain can switch the body into an alert mode under meaning, surprise, or intense emotion. Chills can be emotion’s fingerprint.
Earworms often have a simple secret: the brain wants to complete an unfinished pattern. Short, repeating, predictable choruses can loop all day for that reason.
When a conversation hits a short silence, we often fill it with extra details. The brain can read social gaps as ‘risk’ and talk more to reinforce the bond. Silence doesn’t mean the same to everyone.
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.
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