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1 .This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Erika Beras. Got a minute?
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2 .(sound)
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3 .You see it when you watch almost any game: there's a touchdown, a home run, a goal.
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4 .An athlete has triumphed!
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5 .And then, almost instantly they raise their arms over their shoulders, shout aggressively and push out their chest.
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6 .Like an animal in the wild or, according to a new study, like an athlete not simply winning, but also publicly asserting dominance.
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7 ."Well, I'm the best corner in the game."
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8 .Researchers examined footage of judo athletes from more than a dozen countries in Olympic competitions.
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9 .Across cultures and genders, the athletes demonstrated similar victorious body language.
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10 .And lest you think the behavior is observed and learned, the researchers also looked at blind Para-Olympians,
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11 .they too displayed many of those same actions, leading the investigators to conclude the behavior is innate.
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12 .The study is in the journal Motivation and Emotion.
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13 .The researchers say the victorious body language, known as "dominance threat display," may stem from an evolutionary need to display order.
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14 .As in who gets to do the ordering.
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15 ."Don't you ever talk about me."
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16 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Erika Beras.
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