Vestigial response

A vestigial response or vestigial reflex in a species is a response that has lost its original function. In humans, vestigial responses include ear perking, goose bumps and the hypnic jerk.

In humans

Ear perking

It has been observed that some people have slight protrusions on the outer ear (also known as the auricle). These protrusions tend towards the top of the auricle. This has been tagged and coined Darwin's tubercle of the auricle. This phenomenon jibes with the accepted scientific explanation: the incidence of tubercles of the auricle among humans, are vestigial structures testifying to our evolutionary past. They are a throwback to the pointed ears of many mammals and just one more vestigial trace of man's evolutionary history.

The focus on this part of the human anatomy has finally been followed by a much later observation testifying to our evolutionary past. The subsequent observation concerns an automatic ear-perking response seen, for example, in dogs when startled by a sudden noise. This response, though faint, fleeting and hardly discernible in humans nonetheless clearly manifests itself.[1] This phenomenon is an automatic-response mechanism that activates even before a human becomes consciously aware that a startling, unexpected or unknown sound has been "heard".[2]

That this vestigial response occurs even before becoming consciously aware of a startling noise would explain why the function of ear-perking had evolved in animals. The mechanism serves to give a split-second advantage to a startled animal – possibly an animal being stalked and hunted. The evolutionary advantage of the ear-perking response could spell the difference between life and death. The perking response serves to gather and focus that much more audible information that is fed into the brain and on its way to being analyzed even before the animal actually becomes aware of the sound. This fraction-of-a-second advantage would explain the evolutionary selection for this response.

Goose bumps

The pilomotor reflex, more commonly known as goose bumps, was originally a reflex that assured the raising of fur for additional insulation against cold. When scared, this response also made the frightened animal seem bigger and a more formidable enemy.[3]

Hypnic jerk

The sudden startled arm-jerking response sometimes experienced when on the verge of sleeping is known as the hypnic jerk.

The evolutionary explanation for the existence of the hypnic jerk is unclear, but a possibility is that it is a vestigial reflex humans evolved when they usually slept in trees. Experiencing a hypnic jerk prior to falling asleep may have been selected so that the individual would be able to readjust their sleeping position in the tree with a branch-grabbing response to avoid falling,[4] much as orangutans grasp upper branches of trees while sleeping.

gollark: Well, yes, because they wanted an anonymous network of some sort.
gollark: One would imagine they *run* a bunch of tor nodes.
gollark: Is it though? Is it really?
gollark: Nesting that much would also probably be hilariously slow.
gollark: I wonder just how much of the limited bandwidth available on the intercontinental fibre links is used up by triangles just pretending to be somewhere else so they can watch slightly different stuff on streaming services.

See also

References

  1. Hackley, Steven A. (2015). "Evidence for a vestigial pinna-orienting system in humans". Psychophysiology. 52 (10): 1263–1270. doi:10.1111/psyp.12501. PMID 26211937.
  2. Hankins, Peter (2005-06-02). "Libet's short delay". Archived from the original on 2014-08-18. Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  3. Darwin, Charles (1872). "The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals". London: John Murray. pp. 101–103. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  4. Coolidge & Wynn (2009). The Rise of Homo sapiens: The Evolution of Modern Thinking. Wiley-Blackwell.
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