That's why you want to dance when you eat

What is with this little happy Wiggle?


Some call it a happy dance, some people describe it more like a shore, but the phenomenon of dance by eating something really delicious is not as strange or rare that it may seem.

If you do not know what I'm talking about, however, I'll go to the Internet-Toddlers likethis little child,Who can not stop grooving to silence while she eats her grilled cheese.

If you already know what I'm talking about, you are in the illustrious company other viral numbers like this puppy named Bond who even got an optimistic soundtrack for his good food dance:

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This video has not been tacked. Bond does it every time he is excited, especially food. #twotailzrescue #dogsofatlanta

A post shared byKat Tracey (@kitticles) on

These dogs and small children are the physical incarnation of irrepressible excitement and we tend to think that they are adorable - perhaps in part because we recognize the impulse of our own behavior. Although this reaction has not yet been officially studied by the scientific community, there are a considerable number of people online wondering (and others) the same question: why do we feel like dancing when we Let's eat, even when there is no music?

Theories

Is it because, when we look forward to something good, we are not satisfied to comment how excited we are, and instead, feel the need to release anticipate by making a small dance or rebound ? Does it start when we are babies and toddlers, too young to accurately express our pleasure? Perhaps we keep this mechanism as we get older, as a way to express how much we love what we eat and how much it tastes. Whatever the case, the theories abound.

Professor Charles Spence,Head of the Crossmodal Research Laboratory at the University of Oxford, has some ideas. He says we can certainly consider "feeling sensation of a perception / activity to another" when we think of this question. If you listen to music while you eat, for example, in general, the more you like music, the more you like food eaten while listening to this music. "By following this line of reasoning," If we like to dance , then his enjoyment of this activity could transfer to food. "So, maybe the little dance or wiggle that we do is a way to appreciate more food; if you like dancing, that is- To say that you risk delivering to this motion could increase your pleasure of food experience.

Other psychologists I tense to tell me "Your Devin is as good as mine", here is to assume (on the basis of existing research and a few hunches). At a very basic chemical level, food consumption gives a success of dopamine, the neurotransmitter often called "reward chemical,"Because he indicates theanticipation of pleasure. (This type of lil 'is also linked to dependence, lust and motivation; it is enough to say that it is complicated and has not yet been completely understood.)Finnish researchershave recently proved that eating food leads to an endorphine thrust. Endorphins are another neurotransmitter acting as a natural brain analgesic, responsible for helping you cover pain and discomfort.

Thus, because of the release of dopamine, then endorphins, we connect to eat food with a feeling of good. Dopamine is also part of the process that leads us to move, then maybe the double duty in this case. The joy of anticipating and tasted - this delicious first bite may need a physical expression, thus with the movement. Dopamine can propel you to take action: maybe both to take another bite of what you eat and move your body to express the way you feel.

Of course, dance is also an activity that brings its own liberation of endorphins. As a psychologist of danceDr. Peter Lovatt shared withTelegraphThe dance is cathartic because it connects to the emotional centers of the brain. This emotional release goes hand in hand with a liberation of endorphins that can be greater than what is released during other types of exercises. So, maybe it's the way of our body to look for a double exit of endorphins: the dopamine to anticipate a delicious bite combines with the endorphins of the dance to give us a really wonderful experience, as brief brief. And as Dr. Spence pointed out, the transfer of feeling of food to dance, and vice versa, could also help explain why these two activities seem to go hand in hand.

The answer (perhaps)

Although it has been proven that both dance and eating eating endorphins and dopamine, there are still studies that link firmly to eat food satisfy the desire to dance in your seat. There are even more questions than answers. Does the innate dance impulse to only certain people or is it learning? Is it something you grow up? Does it depend on what kind of food you eat, or the atmosphere you are before?

Despite the conjecture, we are not closer to a definitive answer, even if this phenomenon appeared in all, old viral videosCartoons Snoopy. The last question of Snoopy in the "Supplementime" issue ofYou are a good man, Charlie Brownis apt- "What's wrong with meal preparation a joyful opportunity?" he asks. Although the happy dance that comes with eating food is always something like a magic phenomenon that we do not have the investigative tools yet, there is no reason to stop. Whyshould notThe meal is a joyous opportunity, in as many ways as possible? So when your taste buds command your internal jukebox, at the very least, do not feel that you are alone. And I hope scientists will go to an answer to this mysterious one day. And for more amazing trivia, check50 blowing facts in mind that we are betting you did not know.

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Categories: Smarter Living
Tags: Feel Good / Trivia
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