By Abhishyant Kidangoor What does an eagle ray’s menu look like? An artificial intelligence model can now answer that ...
Doctors and dietitians explain what food noise sounds like, five signs to understand if a person is experiencing food noise, ...
The animal lovers at ZooEarthTV provide relaxing red panda ASMR filled with soft chewing sounds during mealtime.
If chewing, sniffing, or pen-clicking flips your mood in a heartbeat, you’ve got company—and better science.A new peer-reviewed paper pulls the field toward a clear, testable explanation of misophonia ...
Someone who is constantly chewing gum might often be labeled as incredibly anxious or even bored, so they open up a pack of gum and pull out a piece to occupy their time with. It might not look too ...
The scrape of a fork against a plate. The crunch of someone biting into an apple during a meeting. That wet, rhythmic sound of chewing with an open mouth. If reading these descriptions made you ...
Gum makers have claimed, for decades, chewing is good for your mental health. They’re kind of on to something. Humans have chewed on gum for millennia. Scientists are still trying to figure out why.
There is evidence that tooth loss and reduced masticatory function are correlated with cognitive decline. We investigated cortical dynamics during attention and working memory tasks before and after ...
Hearing involves more than just the ears — it's intimately connected to how we think and feel. A recent study has shed light on the possible links between hearing, emotion, and cognition by ...
The image of the bat with blood and feathers around its mouth perfectly illustrates the story now published in Science by an international research team. Credit: Jorge Sereno After nearly 25 years of ...
Some people do not just dislike chewing noises – a condition called “misophonia” – they feel a surge of anger, panic, or disgust that can derail a meal, a class, or a workday. Scientists are now ...