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November 16, 2016 3 mins

Dogs communicate by yawning, and it's complex to figure out what they might mean.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works. Hey, brain stuff,
it's Christian Seger. I've got to come clean. I like dogs.
In fact, I own to My dog, Winchester does this
thing whenever I get home from work, where he's super
excited and he's jumping around all happy, and then he

(00:23):
starts yawning for some reason. I don't know. Maybe he's
just tired, or maybe he's waking up. I don't know,
but he seems pretty delighted. And yawning is one of
the primary ways dogs communicate in their whole complicated system
of subtle body language. It could mean several things. Did
you know that yawning is actually the first expression dogs
learn to use when they're tiny puppies, so it has

(00:46):
multiple meanings depending on the situation a dog is in.
Dogs usually yawn when they want to send a pacifying
or calming signal out to other dogs or people, like hey, everybody,
let's take a breathe there and just chill out, okay.
Yawns have no element of fear or aggression for dogs.
It's like the exact opposite of a threat. So imagine this.

(01:10):
You're in a fistfight, and all you have to do
is just be like, yeawn, nothing dangerous or intimidating here,
just I'm I'm like bored. But wait, why would my
dog do that to me? Okay, sometimes dogs yawn when
they're getting obedience training. If a dog is frustrated, he
might be asking you to give him a little break.

(01:32):
That is, if he sees you as the dominant one
in your relationship. It could also mean that your dog
might be just cooling off his brain. There's a veterinary
behaviorist at you see Davis that thinks dog brains get
hot during periods of inactivity. Dog brains get warm because
their circulation slows down, So yawning supposedly cools the arterial

(01:55):
blood down, helping the dog's brain function. There's one other
thing that yawning and dogs might mean. Dogs also yawn
when they're dealing with anxiety or uncertainty, and this includes
being excited. So maybe my dog is just trying to
control his enthusiasm. And oh also dogs yawn when they're

(02:17):
nervous too, like in a vets office, do you yawn
when you're nervous? Check this out. Dogs can also catch
yawning from the human beings around them. You know how
if you yawn, then other people in the room around
you often start yawning. Well, that often has to do
with a person's capacity for empathy, you know, feeling what

(02:38):
somebody else feels. Well, there was a study about this
that was published in a journal called Biology Letters in
two thousand and eight, and they said twenty one out
of twenty nine dogs yawned at least once in response
to the yawn of an assistant in the room with them.
Human to dog yawn contagion. It sounds like the beginning

(03:00):
of a zombie movie where everyone just yawns at each other.
Check out the Brainstuff channel on YouTube, and for more
on this and thousands of other topics, visit how stuff
works dot com.

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