All About You
The human
body is a great, sweaty, fluid-filled machine, moving and mixing chemicals with
precision and coordination, making everything from memories to mucus. Here we
explore some of the complex, beautiful or just plain gross mysteries of how you
function.
Your Skin Has Four Colors
All skin, without coloring, would appear creamy white.
Near-surface blood
vessels add a blush of red. A yellow pigment
also tints the canvas. Lastly, sepia-toned melanin, created in response
to ultraviolet
rays, appears black in large amounts. These four
hues mix in different proportions to create the skin colors of all the peoples
of Earth.
The World Laughs With You
Just as watching someone yawn can induce the
behavior in yourself, recent evidence
suggests that laughter is a social cue for mimicry. Hearing a laugh actually
stimulates the brain region associated with facial movements. Mimicry plays an
important role in social interaction. Cues like sneezing, laughing, crying and yawning may be ways of creating strong social
bonds within a group.
Big Brains Cause Cramped Mouths
Evolution isn't perfect. If
it were, we might have wings instead of wisdom teeth. Sometimes useless features stick around in a
species simply because they're not doing much harm. But wisdom teeth weren't
always a cash crop for oral surgeons. Long ago, they served as a useful third
set of meat-mashing molars. But as our brains grew our jawbone
structure changed, leaving us with expensively overcrowded mouths.
Cell Hairs Move Mucus
Most cells in our bodies sport hair-like organelles called cilia that
help out with a variety of functions, from digestion to hearing. In the nose, cilia help to drain mucus from the nasal cavity down to the throat. Cold
weather slows down the draining process, causing a mucus backup that can leave
you with snotty sleeves. Swollen nasal membranes or condensation can also cause
a stuffed schnozzle.
Puberty Reshapes Brain Structure, Makes for Missed Curfews
We know that hormone-fueled changes in the body are necessary to
encourage growth and ready the body for reproduction. But why is adolescence so emotionally unpleasant? Hormones like testosterone actually influence the development of neurons in the
brain, and the changes made to brain structure have many behavioral
consequences. Expect emotional awkwardness, apathy and poor
decision-making skills as regions in the
frontal cortex mature.
Thousands of Eggs Unused by Ovaries
When a woman reaches her late 40s or early 50s, the monthly menstrual
cycle that controls her hormone levels and
readies ova for insemination ceases. Her ovaries have been producing less and
less estrogen, inciting physical and emotional changes across her body. Her
underdeveloped egg follicles begin to fail to release ova as regularly as
before. The average adolescent girl has 34,000 underdeveloped egg follicles,
although only 350 or so mature during her life (at the rate of about one per
month). The unused egg follicles then deteriorate. With no potential pregnancy
on the horizon, the brain can stop managing the release of ova.
Much of a Meal is Food For Thought
Though it makes up only 2 percent of our total body weight, the brain demands
20 percent of the body's oxygen and calories. To keep our noggin well-stocked
with resources, three major cerebral arteries are constantly pumping in oxygen.
A blockage or break in one of them starves brain cells of the energy they
require to function, impairing the functions controlled by that region. This is
a stroke.
Bones Break (Down) to Balance Minerals
In addition to supporting the bag of organs and muscles that is our body, bones help regulate our calcium levels. Bones contain both
phosphorus and calcium, the latter of which is needed by muscles and nerves. If the element is in short supply, certain hormones will
cause bones to break down upping calcium levels in the body until the
appropriate extracellular concentration is reached.
Body Position Affects Your Memory
Can't remember your anniversary, hubby? Try getting down on one
knee. Memories are highly embodied in our senses. A scent or sound may evoke a distant episode from one's childhood. The
connections can be obvious (a bicycle bell makes you remember your old paper
route) or inscrutable. A recent study helps decipher some of this embodiment.
An article in the January 2007 issue ofCognition reports that
episodes from your past are remembered faster and better while in a body
position similar to the pose struck during the event.
Your Stomach Secretes Corrosive Acid
There's one dangerous liquid no airport security can confiscate from
you: It's in your
gut. Your stomach cells secrete hydrochloric
acid, a corrosive compound used to treat metals in the industrial world. It can
pickle steel, but mucous lining the stomach wall keeps this poisonous
liquid safely in the digestive system,
breaking down lunch.
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