Why do humans spread their arms while jumping off things?

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
I sat here and watched multiple clips of different people jumping off high things, all of them spread their arms out while they jump

Why?

Is it for excess balance during the fall, like cats, or is it an instinctual reaction, like birds?

I'm guessing, since our evolution is more closely related, it's for balance, like cats.. But what do you think, and why?
 

Geronimo420

Well-Known Member
I sat here and watched multiple clips of different people jumping off high things, all of them spread their arms out while they jump

Why?

Is it for excess balance during the fall, like cats, or is it an instinctual reaction, like birds?

I'm guessing, since our evolution is more closely related, it's for balance, like cats.. But what do you think, and why?
You should try a few jumps with your arm tight against your body to find out
 

Glaucoma

Well-Known Member
I sat here and watched multiple clips of different people jumping off high things, all of them spread their arms out while they jump

Why?

Is it for excess balance during the fall, like cats, or is it an instinctual reaction, like birds?

I'm guessing, since our evolution is more closely related, it's for balance, like cats.. But what do you think, and why?
Cats don't extend their limbs for balance when they fall, they do it to rotate their body so they land feet first while having zero angular momentum. First they extend their hind legs and tuck their front legs to twist the front half around, then tuck their hind legs and extend their front legs to twist the back half around.

Science is awesome.
 

h0m3gr0wn

Well-Known Member
it's for Dynamic stability .Take sky diving for example. You spread your arms and feet to make an Arrow. If the arrow starts to flip sideways, the air resistance against the fletching is greater than the resistance at the nose, and the arrow automatically goes back to its initial orientation. Likewise, skydivers don't want to be tumbling end over end and out of control, so they trail their arms and feet behind them to act like the feathers on the arrow.
 

georgio838

Well-Known Member
its a futile attempt to save ones life in the most desperate of situations hoping that somehow...flapping our arms can actually work like bird wings...probably hardwired into our brains from when at some time in history we actually had feathers?...
 

Glaucoma

Well-Known Member
its a futile attempt to save ones life in the most desperate of situations hoping that somehow...flapping our arms can actually work like bird wings...probably hardwired into our brains from when at some time in history we actually had feathers?...
I agree with the first part. They probably do it because they don't know what else to do with their arms.
 

simply_slide

Well-Known Member
My son does it when startled. He's a baby so it must be instinctual... in my open.

I also agree balance as it is also instinctual to maintain balance
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I think it's the body's reaction to finding itself suddenly not in control. It's a form of grasping for straws.
 

justugh

Well-Known Member
I sat here and watched multiple clips of different people jumping off high things, all of them spread their arms out while they jump

Why?

Is it for excess balance during the fall, like cats, or is it an instinctual reaction, like birds?

I'm guessing, since our evolution is more closely related, it's for balance, like cats.. But what do you think, and why?
monkey see monkey do .....we try to mimic other animals as we see how they do it safely .....and most apes do it as it increases the chance they are able to grab something and swing
 
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