She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens

Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more developed in women than in men. Because there is growing evidence that yawn contagion is an empathy-based phenomenon, we expect that the female bias in the empathic abilities reflects on a gender skew in th...

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Main Authors: Ivan Norscia, Elisa Demuru, Elisabetta Palagi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150459
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spelling doaj-c48876cb4186439cbdf152e6da44082b2020-11-25T03:41:03ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013210.1098/rsos.150459150459She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiensIvan NorsciaElisa DemuruElisabetta PalagiPsychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more developed in women than in men. Because there is growing evidence that yawn contagion is an empathy-based phenomenon, we expect that the female bias in the empathic abilities reflects on a gender skew in the responsiveness to others’ yawns. We verified this assumption by applying a linear model on a dataset gathered during a 5 year period of naturalistic observations on humans. Gender, age and social bond were included in the analysis as fixed factors. The social bond and the receiver’s gender remained in the best model. The rates of contagion were significantly lower between acquaintances than between friends and family members, and significantly higher in women than in men. These results not only confirm that yawn contagion is sensitive to social closeness, but also that the phenomenon is affected by the same gender bias affecting empathy. The sex skew, also found in other non-human species, fits with the female social roles which are likely to require higher empathic abilities (e.g. parental care, group cohesion maintenance, social mediation). The fact that female influence in social dynamics also relies on face-to-face emotional exchange raises concerns on the negative repercussions of having women’s facial expressions forcibly concealed.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150459yawn contagionhumansempathyfemale biassocial bonding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivan Norscia
Elisa Demuru
Elisabetta Palagi
spellingShingle Ivan Norscia
Elisa Demuru
Elisabetta Palagi
She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
Royal Society Open Science
yawn contagion
humans
empathy
female bias
social bonding
author_facet Ivan Norscia
Elisa Demuru
Elisabetta Palagi
author_sort Ivan Norscia
title She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
title_short She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
title_full She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
title_fullStr She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
title_full_unstemmed She more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in Homo sapiens
title_sort she more than he: gender bias supports the empathic nature of yawn contagion in homo sapiens
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Psychological, clinical and neurobiological findings endorse that empathic abilities are more developed in women than in men. Because there is growing evidence that yawn contagion is an empathy-based phenomenon, we expect that the female bias in the empathic abilities reflects on a gender skew in the responsiveness to others’ yawns. We verified this assumption by applying a linear model on a dataset gathered during a 5 year period of naturalistic observations on humans. Gender, age and social bond were included in the analysis as fixed factors. The social bond and the receiver’s gender remained in the best model. The rates of contagion were significantly lower between acquaintances than between friends and family members, and significantly higher in women than in men. These results not only confirm that yawn contagion is sensitive to social closeness, but also that the phenomenon is affected by the same gender bias affecting empathy. The sex skew, also found in other non-human species, fits with the female social roles which are likely to require higher empathic abilities (e.g. parental care, group cohesion maintenance, social mediation). The fact that female influence in social dynamics also relies on face-to-face emotional exchange raises concerns on the negative repercussions of having women’s facial expressions forcibly concealed.
topic yawn contagion
humans
empathy
female bias
social bonding
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150459
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