Yawning and stretching predict brain temperature changes in rats: support for the thermoregulatory hypothesis.

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2010-09-24 eCollection Date: 2010-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2010.00108
Melanie L Shoup-Knox, Andrew C Gallup, Gordon G Gallup, Ewan C McNay
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引用次数: 54

Abstract

Recent research suggests that yawning is an adaptive behavior that functions to promote brain thermoregulation among homeotherms. To explore the relationship between brain temperature and yawning we implanted thermocoupled probes in the frontal cortex of rats to measure brain temperature before, during and after yawning. Temperature recordings indicate that yawns and stretches occurred during increases in brain temperature, with brain temperatures being restored to baseline following the execution of each of these behaviors. The circulatory changes that accompany yawning and stretching may explain some of the thermal similarities surrounding these events. These results suggest that yawning and stretching may serve to maintain brain thermal homeostasis.

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打哈欠和伸展可以预测大鼠的大脑温度变化:支持体温调节假说。
最近的研究表明,打哈欠是一种适应性行为,在恒温动物中起着促进大脑温度调节的作用。为了探讨大脑温度与打哈欠之间的关系,我们在大鼠额叶皮层植入热偶联探针,测量打哈欠前、中、后的大脑温度。温度记录表明,当大脑温度升高时,打哈欠和拉伸会发生,而在这些行为发生后,大脑温度会恢复到基线水平。打哈欠和伸展时的循环变化可以解释围绕这些事件的一些热相似性。这些结果表明,打哈欠和伸展可能有助于维持大脑的热稳态。
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