Institute of Sport - National Research Institute, Warsaw, Poland.
University of Canberra - Research Institute for Sport and Exercise, University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia; School of Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, UK; Hamlyn Centre, Imperial College, UK.
Horm Behav. 2018 Jul;103:107-110. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2018.06.011. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Human gaze is an important indicator of dominant and submissive behaviours related to positioning in a social hierarchy. This study investigated face gazing after a chance-determined contest and its linkage to salivary testosterone (sal-T) reactivity in athletic women. Twenty-six women athletes completed a coin-toss game on days 7 (D7), 14 (D14) and 21 (D21) of a single menstrual cycle. The game was played against an unknown opponent of similar age with the winner congratulated and rewarded with all coins. Gazing towards an opponent's head or face was timed after each contest (over 2 min) from video footage. Salivary T (sal-T) was assessed before and 15 min after these contests. The sal-T residuals increased after winning and decreased after losing on D7, D14 and D21 (p < 0.05). Gaze times were longer after a loss (M = 7.8 s) than a win (M = 3.1 s) across all days. Regression analyses revealed that the sal-T residuals and contest outcome interacted to predict gaze time. Upon deconstruction we found that, when losing a contest, a larger sal-T response (i.e., smaller decline) predicted a longer gaze (β = 1.71, p = 0.004), but no association was evident when winning (β = -0.06, p = 0.821), and these slope patterns differed (p = 0.011). In conclusion, winning a contest by chance increased sal-T responsivity and decreased opponent gaze across the menstrual cycle. A positive relationship between individual sal-T reactivity and gaze duration was observed, but only when losing. These preliminary results support suggestions that women's T may help modulate post-competition behaviours (e.g., face gazing) possibly to achieve social cohesion and cooperation.
人类的注视是与社会等级中定位相关的支配和顺从行为的一个重要指标。本研究调查了偶然决定的比赛后的面部注视及其与竞技女性唾液睾丸酮(sal-T)反应的联系。26 名女运动员在一个月经周期的第 7 天(D7)、第 14 天(D14)和第 21 天(D21)完成了掷硬币游戏。比赛是与一个年龄相仿的未知对手进行的,获胜者会受到祝贺并获得所有硬币作为奖励。在每次比赛后(超过 2 分钟),会根据视频片段记录注视对手头部或面部的时间。在这些比赛之前和之后的 15 分钟评估唾液 T(sal-T)。在 D7、D14 和 D21 上,赢了比赛后 sal-T 残差增加,输了比赛后 sal-T 残差减少(p<0.05)。所有日子中,输了比赛后的注视时间都比赢了比赛后的注视时间长(M=7.8s)。回归分析显示,sal-T 残差和比赛结果相互作用预测注视时间。进一步分析发现,输掉比赛时,sal-T 反应较大(即下降较小)预示着注视时间较长(β=1.71,p=0.004),但赢得比赛时则没有明显关联(β=-0.06,p=0.821),且这些斜率模式存在差异(p=0.011)。总之,偶然赢得比赛会增加 sal-T 反应性并减少整个月经周期内对对手的注视。观察到个体 sal-T 反应性与注视持续时间之间存在正相关关系,但仅在输掉比赛时存在。这些初步结果支持了女性 T 可能有助于调节比赛后行为(例如面部注视)以实现社会凝聚力和合作的建议。