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Curiosity Lab

Why do we do the strange things we do?

30+ bite-sized, science-backed answers to the questions your brain keeps asking itself.

Curious brain scientist

30 articles

๐Ÿ˜ฎ
Body

Why do we yawn?

It's not (just) about being tired.

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๐ŸŒ™
Sleep & Dreams

Why do we dream?

Your brain's overnight maintenance crew.

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๐Ÿ˜‚
Emotion

Why do we laugh?

Laughter is older than language.

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๐Ÿ˜ข
Emotion

Why do we cry?

Tears are a uniquely human signal.

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๐Ÿ˜ณ
Social

Why do we blush?

Honesty written across your face.

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๐Ÿ—‘๏ธ
Memory

Why do we forget?

Forgetting is a feature, not a bug.

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๐Ÿ”
Memory

Why do we feel dรฉjร  vu?

A glitch in the memory matrix.

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๐ŸŽต
Memory

Why do songs get stuck in our heads?

Welcome to the earworm.

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โ„๏ธ
Body

Why do we get goosebumps?

An echo of our furrier past.

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๐Ÿ’ค
Sleep & Dreams

Why do we sleep?

Without it, the brain literally clogs.

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โณ
Mind

Why does time fly when we're having fun?

Your brain measures by novelty.

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๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ
Mind

Why do we have an inner voice?

Thinking out loud, silently.

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๐Ÿ‘๏ธ
Senses

Why do we blink so much?

Tiny mental resets.

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๐ŸŽง
Memory

Why do we have a favorite song?

Music + memory = magic.

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๐Ÿซ
Body

Why do we hiccup?

A leftover from gill breathing.

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๐Ÿœ
Senses

Why do we itch?

Your skin's spam filter.

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๐Ÿ‘†
Senses

Why do we have fingerprints?

Not for grip - for feel.

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๐Ÿฆ‹
Body

Why do we get butterflies in our stomach?

Your second brain is panicking.

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โค๏ธโ€๐Ÿ”ฅ
Emotion

Why do we fall in love?

A cocktail of ancient chemicals.

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๐Ÿ‘€
Senses

Why do we see faces in clouds?

Your brain is a face-detection machine.

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๐Ÿค
Social

Why do we need friends?

Loneliness is a health emergency.

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โšก
Body

Why do we feel pain?

The most underrated warning system.

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๐Ÿฅ
Senses

Why do we move to music?

Rhythm hijacks your motor system.

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๐Ÿฉ
Mind

Why are bad habits so sticky?

Your brain values automation.

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๐ŸŽญ
Emotion

Why do we have emotions?

Fast decisions, before the facts.

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โฐ
Mind

Why do we procrastinate?

Future you is a stranger.

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๐ŸŒˆ
Senses

Why do we see colors?

Your eyes don't 'see' color. Your brain decides it.

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๐ŸŽฏ
Mind

Why is it so hard to focus?

Your attention is being farmed.

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๐Ÿ™†
Body

Why do we stretch when we wake up?

Your muscles rebooting.

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๐Ÿช„
Mind

Why do we believe in magic?

Pattern-finding gone playful.

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The Science of Curiosity

Why curiosity is one of the most powerful learning drugs we have

Curiosity isn't just a personality trait - it's a dopaminergic state that measurably increases memory formation, learning speed, and well-being.

A landmark 2014 study at the University of California, Davis (Gruber, Gelman & Ranganath, Neuron) showed that when participants were in a high-curiosity state, fMRI revealed increased activity in the hippocampus and the dopaminergic midbrain - and they remembered incidental information presented during that state significantly better, even 24 hours later. Curiosity literally primes the brain to encode whatever comes next.

Psychologists distinguish two types: 'interest-curiosity' (the pleasurable pursuit of new information) and 'deprivation-curiosity' (the itch to close an information gap). Both engage reward circuitry, but deprivation-curiosity - the feeling of almost-knowing - is the more powerful memory enhancer, per work from the Max Planck Institute for Human Development.

Curiosity is also associated with measurable life outcomes. A long-running study from the Karolinska Institutet found that higher trait curiosity in middle age predicted better cognitive function in older adulthood, independent of education and IQ. The American Psychological Association lists curiosity as one of the five strongest protective traits against cognitive decline.

Practically: small, repeated 'why does that happen?' questions throughout the day - answered briefly with reliable sources - produce more durable knowledge than long study sessions, by leveraging the spacing effect (Cepeda et al., Psychological Bulletin 2006) and active retrieval.

Key research findings

  • States of curiosity enhance hippocampal-dependent memory formation, even for incidental information.

    Source: Gruber, Gelman & Ranganath - Neuron, UC Davis (2014)

  • Trait curiosity in midlife predicts better cognitive function decades later.

    Source: Sakaki et al. / Karolinska longitudinal data - Psychology and Aging

  • Spaced and curiosity-driven retrieval beats massed study for long-term retention.

    Source: Cepeda et al. - Psychological Bulletin (2006)

Frequently asked questions

Can you train curiosity?+

Yes. Daily practices like 'one new question a day', exposure to unfamiliar topics, and Socratic dialogue all increase measured curiosity scores (Kashdan et al., Journal of Personality Assessment, 2018).

Why are kids so much more curious than adults?+

Developmental neuroscience attributes this to a slower-maturing prefrontal cortex and more flexible synaptic pruning, which make novelty-seeking adaptive in childhood. Adults can deliberately recreate the same state by reducing predictability - new routes, new people, new questions.

Is curiosity linked to happiness?+

Studies by Todd Kashdan (George Mason University) show curiosity is one of the most robust predictors of life satisfaction - comparable in effect size to having close relationships.