Submitted by LAMARR__44 t3_11o5vbz in askscience

I’m interested in the winners effect which is where an increase in testosterone is observed following a victory in physical and non-physical competitions. I’ve seen studies that replicate the effects in sports, chess, and video games.

The studies I have read use face to face competitions in their experiments, I’m wondering if there’s any evidence of the winners effect in non face to face competitions. For example, will winning an online chess game or video against someone who I don’t know at all increase my testosterone? My hypothesis is that it won’t as my mind doesn’t really know if I’m actually playing against another person, which means my mind doesn’t think that my position on the social dominance hierarchy is changing.

Any responses would be appreciated!

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[deleted] t1_jbsldc3 wrote

[removed]

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jeg_flaekker_alt t1_jbt4xmq wrote

This reads like a ChatGPT answer for some reason.

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electric_ionland t1_jbt7pr0 wrote

It is sadly, OP has been banned. Please if you have doubts report the comment and we can have a look in more details.

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albasri t1_jbsppqj wrote

Please add citations for these studies.

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dtmc t1_jbyliu7 wrote

There're some studies looking at the role of testosterone in anonymous social interactions (like one-shot trust games) but nothing I'm finding related to the winners effect in anonymous competitions, sadly.

I found those studies with a "testosterone+anonymous+competition" boolean search

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