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UBC
study of
Olympic
athletes
shows
that
pride
and
shame
are
universal
and
innate
expressions
The
victory
stance
of a
gold
medalist
and the
slumped
shoulders
of a
non-finalist
are
innate
and
biological
rather
than
learned
responses
to
success
and
failure,
according
to a
University
of
British
Columbia
study
using
cross-cultural
data
gathered
at the
2004
Olympic
and
Paralympic
Games.
In
the
first
study of
its
kind,
UBC
psychology
researcher
Jessica
Tracy
investigated
how
pride
and
shame
are
expressed
across
cultures,
and
among
the
congenitally
blind.
She
compared
the
non-verbal
expressions
and body
language
of
sighted,
blind,
and
congenitally
blind
judo
competitors
representing
more
than 30
countries,
among
them
Algeria,
Taiwan,
North
Korea,
the
Ukraine
and the
United
States.
Asst.
Prof.
Tracy's
findings
–
published
in this
week's
online
Early
Edition
of the
journal
Proceedings
of the
National
Academy
of
Sciences
– show
that the
individuals
displayed
pride
and
shame
behaviours
in
response
to the
same
success
and
failure
situations.
Pride,
unlike
fear,
anger or
joy –
which
are
categorized
as
primary
emotions
– has
received
little
research
attention
in the
past,
explains
Tracy.
Her work
explores
how
pride as
an
innate
human
biological
response
has
evolved
through
time and
shapes
human
social
dynamics.
"Since
congenitally
blind
individuals
could
not have
learned
pride
and
shame
behaviors
from
watching
others,
these
displays
of
victory
or
defeat
are
likely
to be an
innate
biological
propensity
in
humans,
rather
than
learned
behaviour,"
says
Tracy.
Tracy
and
co-author
Psychology
Prof.
David
Matsumoto
of San
Francisco
State
University
analyzed
photos
taken by
an
official
International
Judo
Federation
photographer
who was
not told
about
the
specific
research
goals.
The
photographer
shot the
athletes
during
and
immediately
after
each
match,
repeatedly
for
approximately
15
seconds,
allowing
for a
series
of
moment-by
moment
images
of each
behavioural
response.
The
researchers
coded
the
athletes'
head,
arms and
body
positions.
They
found
that
winning
athletes,
both
sighted
and
blind
and
across
all
cultures,
tended
to raise
their
arms,
tilt
their
head up
and puff
out
their
chest.
Also
largely
universal
were the
expressions
of
defeat,
which
include
slumped
shoulders
and a
narrowed
chest.
The
researchers
found
that, to
some
extent,
culture
moderated
the
shame
response
among
sighted
athletes.
It was
less
pronounced
among
individuals
from
highly
individualistic,
self-expression-valuing
cultures,
primarily
in North
America
and West
Eurasian
countries.
However,
congenitally
blind
athletes
across
cultures
showed
the
shame
response,
suggesting
that the
cultural
difference
found
among
sighted
athletes
was due
to the
Western
cultural
norm of
hiding
one's
shame.
"These
findings
support
evolutionary
accounts
that
pride
and
shame
would
have
been
powerful
mechanisms
in
enhancing
or
inhibiting
an
individual's
social
status,"
says
Tracy.
Source:
University
of
British
Columbia
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