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第1段

1 .This is Scientific American's 60-Second Mind, I'm Karen Hopkin.Got a minute?

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2 .A lot of us march to the beat of our own drummer.

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3 .But there are certain benefits to walking in sync.

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4 .It can make you feel like you're one of the gang.

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5 .And it might make people who are not in your gang look less threatening.

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6 .That's according to a study in the journal Biology Letters.

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7 .Synchronized movement has long been known to cement alliances and to enhance cooperation.

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8 .But can it also change the way you see those outside your troop?

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9 .To find out, researchers had participants pair off and walk together, either in synch or just at their natural pace.

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10 .Afterwards, the volunteers were shown a mug shot of an angry male face and asked to estimate the criminal's overall size.

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11 .Those subjects who kept pace with a colleague found the bad guy to be less formidable than did their out-of-synch peers.

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12 .Marchers guessed the mug-shot man was an inch shorter and about 10 percent smaller and less muscular than did the subjects who simply strolled.

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13 .The findings suggest that physical coordination could boost your self confidence.

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14 .On the down side, it might also lead you to underestimate an opponent, a miscalculation that could really get you off on the wrong foot.

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15 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Mind. I'm Karen Hopkin.

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