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The Laughing Baby is a YouTube viral video of a baby laughing. The video became an internet phenomenon and has had a total of over 100 million views across multiple uploads. . Originally uploaded by a Swedish man under the pseudonym of spacelord72, and later re-uploaded and popularized by another user known as BlackOleg, the "Laughing Baby" is one of the few internet memes that have entered ...
A gelastic seizure, also known as "gelastic epilepsy", is a rare type of seizure that involves a sudden burst of energy, usually in the form of laughing. [1] This syndrome usually occurs for no obvious reason and is uncontrollable. It is slightly more common in males than females.
There are thousands of languages, hundreds of thousands of dialects, but everyone speaks laughter in pretty much the same way." Babies have the ability to laugh before they ever speak. Children who are born blind and deaf still retain the ability to laugh. [9] Provine argues that "Laughter is primitive, an unconscious vocalization."
A set of triplets who refuse to sleep are cracking each other up — and TikTok is laughing along. “They feed off each other so when one is laughing, so are the others,” Julia Platsman, a ...
Angelman syndrome; Other names: Angelman's syndrome [1] [2]: A five-year-old girl with Angelman syndrome. Features shown include telecanthus, bilateral epicanthic folds, small head, wide mouth, and an apparently happy demeanor; hands with tapered fingers, abnormal creases and broad thumbs.
Interior designer Grace Kaage's 2-year-old son, Christian, drew all over her white couch. See how she responded to her toddler drawing on her white furniture.
Your dance moves are smoother than Baby Groot's groove. 88. You're more quotable than The Office reruns. 89. Your life story is more interesting than a Netflix documentary (not a murder one ...
One study analyzed sounds made by human babies and bonobos when tickled. It found that although the bonobo's laugh was a higher frequency, the laugh followed the same sonographic pattern as human babies and included similar facial expressions. Humans and chimpanzees share similar ticklish areas of the body such as the armpits and belly. [6]