6 Things Your Body Does Every Day That Science Can't Explain
The human race has scaled the tallest mountains, charted the deepest oceans and played a quick front nine on the freaking moon, but there's one frontier that still largely mystifies us: our own bodies.
There are everyday phenomenons you'd think must have been explained ages ago, but in reality asking these simple questions of a scientist will net you at best a shrug, and at worst some bullshit he just made up off the top of his head.

The act of yawning is baffling to experts for two reasons. One, it doesn't actually seem to serve any purpose. Seriously, when you feel a yawn coming on, suppress it. What happens? Do you go into convulsions? Is your face racked by pain? Does blood shoot from your nose? No. Not a damned thing happens.
Equally baffling, though, is the contagious nature of it. Yawn, and whoever sees you will yawn. When a chimpanzee yawns, the other chimps yawn. If you yawn, you can make a dog yawn. Seriously, try it.

Odds are you've yawned once just because you read the word "yawn" several times above. Why?
Science's Wild-Ass Guess:
Your science textbook in elementary school may have said that low oxygen levels in the blood triggered yawning, with the yawn providing a quick influx of the gas. That was the prevailing theory going back to the days of ancient Greece. As is usually the case though, it turns out people from back in the day didn't know what the hell they were talking about. In fact it's been found yawning may actually decrease oxygen intake. Makes sense, when you do hard exercise you don't start frantically yawning. You don't see athletes yawning in the middle of a sprint.
Unfortunately, the alternatives are quite a bit more insane.
Such as the theory that yawning is the body's way of controlling brain temperature. Yeah, apparently scientists think our brains function with all the complexity of an old car engine. And you know how you're always yawning when you wear a hat, right? Right?

The proof of this was experiments in which it was found people with cool packs attached to their heads yawned less. Unless there could be some other reason people sitting in an unfamiliar lab with ice packs on their heads weren't much in a yawning mood...
As for why yawning is contagious, some scientists have pointed to human being's primitive herd instincts, figuring group yawning could have helped regulate sleeping patterns so that a "whoops, we all fell asleep at once and got eaten by giant sloths" situation didn't develop.
This remains merely a theory though, and of course still doesn't explain why people yawn while on their own.

Hey teenagers, need something else to add to your angst pile? Turns out these awkward times you're going through are far from universal in the animal kingdom. It's only humans Mother Nature decided to kick in the nuts, cursing to an opposite sex-repelling bubble of greasy clumsiness.
What evolutionary sense does it make for guys to be confined to their parents' basements smearing Clearasil on their face during their prime sexual years?

Yeah, a tie, that'll do it.
Scientists can't even agree when exactly the adolescent phase evolved. Some believe teenagers were awkward balls of nerves and nose grease as early as the Homo erectus era over a million years ago, while others think it's a much more recent development. Until they find a Homo erectus skeleton holding a fossilized iPod filled with My Chemical Romance songs, we may never know for sure.

Science's Wild-Ass Guess:
Some scientists argue that guys' half-decade of dorkdom is designed to force them develop traits chicks dig, like a sense of humor, artistic talent and conversational skills. Honestly though this theory sounds like the wishful thinking of scientists who don't want to face the ugly truth that their memorization of the periodic table and every Battlestar Galactica episode won't be getting them in any girl's pants ever.
Plus, it's hard to buy from an evolutionary perspective. Are we seriously to believe that all the guys who didn't have awkward teen years somehow got bred out of the population? Where we went to high school, while the clumsy awkward teens were trying to discover our charming adult personalities, the cool teens were busy having sex with one another. After a few thousand years of that, shouldn't evolution dictate that we all turn into Sean Connery on our 13th birthday?


It's obvious why some placebos work. A guy says he's feeling nauseous, you give him a sugar pill and tell him it'll cure it. He stops worrying about his stomach, thus the stomach calms down. The "herbal Viagra" industry and products like ExtenZe can enhance sexual performance by making the man think he has taken something that will enhance his sexual performance. It's easy to imagine how it works.
But the placebo effect goes way, way beyond that.
Completely imaginary drugs have been found to help everything from warts, to heart disease, to asthma. Doctors have even gone so far as to conduct sham knee surgeries that were almost as effective as the real thing.

"Fake knee surgeries, what a terrific use of my medical degree."
What the hell?
Science's Wild-Ass Guess:
First, there's debate over whether the placebo effect is even real at all, with some believing that most recoveries attributed to the effect can be explained by the body's natural healing abilities (as in, the patients would have gotten better even if they hadn't seen a doctor at all).
On one level, that's actually pretty disturbing. Keep in mind, some studies show placebos work as well as actual medical techniques in up to 50 to 60 percent of cases. Yes, it's possible 50 to 60 percent of what the trillion dollar medical industry does could be achieved by staying home, resting and watching daytime TV. Try not to think about that one too much or you may end up on YouTube screaming something at a town hall meeting.
Others have even hypothesized the placebo effect may just be us unconsciously ignoring or repressing symptoms so we please our doctors. Meaning, the patient was still in pain, but was fed up with sitting in the waiting room for an hour every week so finally said, "fuck it." Tell the doc you're all better and get him to sign a note for you to return to work.

"I did it? Hell yeah. I rule at doctoring."
None of those explain everything, including the extremely weird fact that the phenomenon has become more and more powerful in recent years.
Again we ask, what the hell?








i just read this entire article and most of the comments. i haven't yawned even ONCE!. take THAT unexplainable phenomenon!!
Replyand the people who say stuff about dreams being just our unconcious telling our concious state what we need...does that mean that despite my shortness and lack of physical strength,i will some day be in a wrestling event with John Cena, Kharma, Sheamus and a buttload of other wrestlers?...f'ing kick ass.
Shit, picture 3 hit combo
ReplyEven weirder: placebos are shown to work even when the patient knows that they're taking a placebo. What!
ReplyProbably going to punch this author in the dick. Really? REALLY GUYS? Nearly all of these "Science's Wild-Ass Guess" things don't even have the most up to date information! (Yes, I realize this is a 2009 article. That's why I mean up to date as in even for 2009.) I love Cracked, I love you guys, but REALLY? Sometimes I wonder if you masturbate thinking about what you could make people believe today...
ReplyI actually did yawn when I was reading the part about yawning.
ReplyI just yawned reading your comment. Explain that science!
William, they CAN'T. Didn't you read the article!?
I honestly thought the guy yawning was having an orgasm.
ReplyThe wife and baby are moving out....
ReplyMaybe the doctors are trying to save cash by giving us fake pills, eh?
ReplyThis is why I am not a doctor
The guy yawning in the pic looks like hes sucking somebody off.
ReplyI think my child hates me now
ReplyInteresting. I thought yawning (in mid day only) was believed to relieve stress.
ReplyAbout the dreams...I think it works differently for everyone. Myself for example, I have a pretty vivid imagination compared to most of the people I am friends or work with. I just perceive some things in a different way than others. (especially like computer games, art, and design) But for most if not all people, you have things on your mind that will stick there throughout the day.
For example, if you saw an attractive female walking past you, and you simply pass by her. You look at her, knowing she is attractive, but it's no big deal...you see hot women everywhere right? So you drop the subject. You then continue your day with work, TV, video games, or whatever you normally do.
Put all that in a blender in your mind when you dream...and your sub conscious will bring those memories of that to life, including the hot woman you saw. (that you dropped from your mind earlier in the day, but now she is in your dream)
I have pretty long dreams. I remember about three of them that had lots of detailed events. It was almost like real life, but in slow-motion.
Maybe that's how I operate..or just my opinion. It's hard to tell.
Yawning.. I'd say it has something to do with calibration - if you develop a sleep pattern, your body will become accustomed to sleeping at a certain time.. when that time nears, you start yawning.. seems like a reminder of sorts - Calibrating what? well, the inter workings of the ear seem to regulate balance, the shift of pressure in the ear while yawning calibrates vertical & horizontal. Why do we yawn when others yawn? We see yawn, brain thinks yawn, tells body to yawn.. in a way, its not good for us to see others yawn, as it would slightly modify our sleeping habits, which should remain fairly constant.
ReplyDreams.. Say you spend the entire day taking pictures and recording information.. when you copy that information to your computer, you have to sort it, or you'll have a hard time finding the things that you need from it when you go to retrieve it. The brain is a computer - it has to sort all of the data it took in from the day's events - while it does that.. I agree with the unconscious desires theory. Think about when you're driving and start to nod off.. you don't just fall asleep, you start dreaming while you're still conscious - The brain can process so much data before it has to move the data from RAM (short term memory) to a slower, higher-density storage medium (long-term memory).
/Not a neuroscientist
//Just my brand of logic
Hello, fellow Farker!
Reply"Others have even hypothesized the placebo effect may just be us unconsciously ignoring or repressing symptoms so we please our doctors."
Really, "unconsciously ignoring"? Perhaps subconsciously...
There is no such thing as "subconscious". Consciousness is one of those things where you either have it or you don't. If it's not conscious, it's unconscious. Subconscious implies you have some control over it. Then it would be conscious. Consciousness is binary.
I've got a couple of theories on most of this stuff that seem pretty reasonable and have heard people explain these things in ways that make perfect sense.
ReplyThe guy in #1 is HOT.
ReplyThis is the most factual statement in this whole article. That man is very fine. Superfly, even. I'd love to rub my fingers through his hair.
#1. IT. SUCKED.
ReplyoNcE YOU'VE READ THE.
Reply Hide All See All 5 RepliesFIRST WORD OF.
THIS YOU CANT GET OUT.
READ ON OR.
DIE TONIGHT AT 10:35...... P.M.9 years ago.
a person named Jerry got.
dared to sleep.
in a house that was belived.
haunted.The... next day his friends.
waited for him out.
side the house...................
They had
to go inside and search for.
him. They
went through every room.
exept the
attic.He wasn't supposed to.
sleep
there. He was supposed to.
sleep in the.
living room they went into.
the attic.
They saw Jerry's corpse and.
they just
left because they were.
scared. But that
night they all died because.
of their
friend. He killed them all.
for making him.
sleep in that house If you.
don't send
this to 11 comments you.
will die tonight.
by Jerry. Example 1: A man.
named
Stewart Read this and.
didn't believe it.
He shut off his computer.
and went
through his day. That night
while he
was in bed he heard.
something outside
of his door. He got up to.
look. And now
he's dead. Example 2: A Girl.
named
Haley Read this in the.
morning and she.
got scared but she didn't.
send it. She
wanted to know if it was.
true. She went
to school (She was only 13.
years old)
and that night she died. If
you don't
post this on 11 comments.
tonight Jerry
will 'visit' you.
Retard...
Don't worry about Jerry I'll get you long before he does
read this at 10:33, waited a few minutes, lived. I MUST BE MAGICAL!!
How do we know Stewart heard something and got up to check if he's dead now? I can't believe I read that whole thing.
Oh great, these are spreading to Cracked now, too. I thought we got rid of them on youtube with that "flag for spam" feature. Now that we've got thumbs ups, how bout we get one of the spam flags, huh?
I find the over use of the black man's 'fro to be racist and offensive!
Reply Hide All See All 3 Repliesim white and a i also find it offensive... but not like cracked gives a s**t
i'm a black guy with an afro and i wouldn't have any problem with my picture being used except for the part where its on some dude's crotch.
I bet if the guy was white you wouldn't have said a thing. Hypocrite.
you were right and now i have no more pubic hair
ReplyYet another article where I find an unnecessary shot at My Chemical ?Romance. They are not a bad band, they just get a lot of crap flung at them. I mean seriously, where's the point in that?
Replygo write a s****y emo song about it.