ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (2024)

British Columbia·Analysis

When Victoria neuroscientist Olav Krigolson is barraged with puppy videos all that tail-wagging cuteness offers more than just a quick jolt of joy — it may even do a little brain healing.

'It's not a real medicine but cute heals you,' says Seattle researcher in Tokyo

Yvette Brend · CBC News

·

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (1)

Why watching cute animal videos is good for your brain

7 years ago

Duration 1:31

Don't feel guilty about watching this cuteness. Science is our on your side! Thumbnail attached.

When University of Victoria neuroscientist Olav Krigolson is barraged with puppy videos from his partner who wants a puppy, all thattail-wagging cuteness offers more than just a quick joltof joy— it may even do a little brain healing.

An emergingJapanese school of thought, whichrevolves around the study ofKawaiior the quality ofbeing cute, has found evidence thatstaring at cute things can boost mood and concentration by tapping into the same chemical reward system in the brain that makes cocaine addictive.

Millions of people send so-called"internet flouff" —cute animal videos or memes — to friends daily with no concept of the power of cuteness. Search #flouff on Twitter for endless puppy shots.

The adorable dog videosKrigolson's partner sends him, hinting for a puppy, are habit forming.

Krigolsonsaidunexpected animal antics attract us at a neurological level.

"You are not expecting to see something cute and cuddly and then you see it and it's perceived by the brain as a reward," said Krigolson.

So fluffy dogs, scrappy kittens and adorable hedgehogs give thebrain a short-livedchemical boost that can crosscultural divides.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (2)

How it works

"There is no doubt there is a short-term burst of happiness," Krigolson said."That should lead to better cognitive function for the short term. Staring at cute things activates the amygdala[an area of the brain deals withemotions]and other emotional areas of the brain, which ramps up other cognitive systems.

"So there is a benefit. What makes it particularly powerful is when the emotional response and reward are wrapped together," he said.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (3)

The cute image delivers the brain a miniscule blast of dopamine, working the same chemical reward systemactivatedby drugs like cocaine.

It makes us come back for more before we are even conscious we want to.

While some Facebook users have movedtoInstagramto avoid political and news content, few internet users escape cute creaturememes.

Krigolson points to 1950s studiesthat inserted a wire into rats brains so they could self stimulate their dopamine releases.

"The rats would just sit there hammering on the lever. They wouldn't eat. They wouldn't sleep," he said.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (4)

Animal images also trigger emotionalresponses, deliveringhormones likeoxytocin,dubbed the "cuddle chemical," which offers the feeling of bliss enjoyed by some breast-feedingmothers.

School of kawaii

It makes sense that a research stream that studies the quality of being cute hails from Japan, thesame country that created everything from Hello Kitty,an iconic feline character,toDoge, a pervasivememeofaShibaInu dog, whose sidelong glance exploded on social media.

In Tokyo, researchers like Kawaii guru Hiroshi Nittono hostconferences and "cute studies" published in the East Asian Journal of Popular Culture that explore everything from Hello Kitty to kyaraben — bento boxes where the food is crafted into cute characters.

Lost in translation

Seattle scholar Joshua Dale, who has lived for years in Japan,became so fascinated by the concept of kawaii,that he wrote a book.

"It's a multi-billion dollar industry and once you start looking, it's everywhere," Dalesaid in an interview from his Tokyo home, pointing to everything fromDisney and Pixar content toobsessive animal-video sharing online.

But he said there is some confusion.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (5)

In English, cute can also mean "clever." Because of this, Dale saidEnglish-speaking people often suspect cute things may be manipulative.

The Japanese concept of kawaii is simple, sugary cuteness that is seen as potentially healing, or Iwasasu in Japanese.

Despite disparities in meaning, the feeling people get when they look at cute things needs no translation.

Feel the cute

"If you find something cute then your body reacts in a way that so far we think is universal across cultures," said Dale.

Cute lights up the reward centres of the brain and attracts attention quickly.

So is it addictive?

Perhaps, but Dale sees it asan addiction to a placebo.

"It's not a real medicine ... but it can make you feel better because it releases those chemicals in the brain it can actually make you feel better." he said.

"They say 'healing' here. That cute heals you."

Research confirms that phenomenon.

Hiroshima University research showed that staring at "cute" pictures of baby animals improved attention and concentration in 132 university students.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (6)

So if footage of a curled up hedgehog or squirming puppy stops you midstream, relax. It might help.

But there's no guarantee that the video will work twice. Once it's not a surprise, it won't trigger the brain's reward system.

"If you are expecting to see kittens all the time, it won't trigger the reward system." said Krigolson.

"At a corporate level you can imagine hiring your cuteness officer who would constantly be sifting through new things that will evoke this response," he said.

Viral music videos that blend cute with the grotesque — like Kyary Pamyu Pamyu — to keep shaking up and pushing the limits of cute.

So if you're tempted to replace Donald Trump images with kittens, using the Make America Kittens Again Chrome extension,it's OK.

Click away.

Give your brain a cookie.

ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (7)

Corrections and clarifications|Submit a news tip|

Related Stories

  • Hello Kitty Supercute Friendship Festival launches in Vancouver
  • Instagram's most famous feline comes to Edmonton Cat Fest
  • Kitten kindergarten more than just adorable - it could keep cats out of shelters
  • Photos Toronto Zoo polar bear cub, Juno, shows off for camera
  • Video Toronto Zoo polar bear cub reveals name on YouTube
  • Hello Kitty turns 40 with 1st ever fan convention
  • Video Twin panda cubs begin to open their adorable eyes at Toronto Zoo
  • 'Cuddly' diplomacy: Canada's new panda cubs renew the politics of cuteness
  • A crow, a cub, a rescue cat and more: the best of B.C. animal stories in 2016
ANALYSIS | Cuteness power: Why watching animal videos is good for your brain | CBC News (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6316

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.