Quote from: Sandra on Nov, 08, 2025,
Quote from: Sandra on Nov, 08, 2025,And in this case it looks like she might be waiting to have her mouth filled with my creamy white stuff, while watching me
Quote from: curiousgeorge on Aug, 02, 2025, "What we've found is what people mean is they [stick out their tongue] when they are doing something delicate that requires fine motor activation of their hands."
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Quote from: Sandra on Jun, 18, 2025, "What we've found is what people mean is they [stick out their tongue] when they are doing something delicate that requires fine motor activation of their hands."And for seeing intense guitar players doing the same, while mimicking what they're doing with their fingers.
One theory for why this happens is called motor overflow. Neuroimaging reveals that the region of the brain devoted to language (located in the inferior frontal gyrus) is highly overlapping with neural networks Motor overflow suggests that neurons firing in the dexterity region are so activated that they overflow into neighboring neural tissue (which happens to direct the mouth). Therefore, when you're deeply focused on a fine-motor task, the effect "spills over" into the language region, causing you to engage your mouth and tongue. The hands and the tongue are the "only fine articulators on our bodies and are controlled by overlapping bits of our brain"