Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

The Hair-Raising Science Of Goose Bumps

NPR's Skunk Bear Julien Bouglé

When snow monkeys get cold, their goose bumps fluff up their hair, trapping an insulating layer of air.
zomYY vimeo
When snow monkeys get cold, their goose bumps fluff up their hair, trapping an insulating layer of air.

Watch a scary movie and your skin crawls. Goose bumps have become so associated with fear that the word is synonymous with thrills and chills.

But what on earth does scary have do to with chicken-skin bumps? For a long time, it wasn't well understood.

Advertisement

Physiologically, it's fairly simple. Adrenaline stimulates tiny muscles to pull on the roots of our hairs, making them to stand out from our skin. That distorts the skin, causing bumps to form. Call it horripilation, and you'll be right — bristling from cold or fear.

Charles Darwin once investigated goose bumps by scaring zoo animals with a stuffed snake. He put forth the now accepted theory that goose bumps are a vestige of humanity's ancient past. Our ancestors were hairy. Goose bumps would have fluffed up their hair. When they were scared, that would have made them look bigger — and more intimidating to attackers. When they were cold, that would have trapped an insulating layer of air to keep them warm.

We modern humans still get goose bumps when we're scared or cold, even though we've lost the advantage of looking scarier ourselves.

And researchers have found that listening to classical music (or Phil Collins), seeing pictures of children or drinking a sour drink can also inspire goose bumps. There's clearly a link with emotion and reward, too.

Dive deeper into the science of goose bumps in Skunk Bear's latest hair-raising video.

Advertisement

Check out more Skunk Bear videos on YouTube, and the Skunk Bear blog on Tumblr. Follow on twitter @nprskunkbear.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.