
Giant Anteaters and Power Posing
Becky Ripley and Emily Knight look to the animal world to question why we "power pose". Anteaters are masters of it. But can the same be said of us?
Becky Ripley and Emily Knight look to the animal world to question why we "power pose". Anteaters are masters of it. When feeling threatened, they rear up on their hind legs and extend their arms out wide to show off their huge claws. It is a posture that is designed to make them look more intimidating to predators or competing rivals. Does it work like this for us? If we take up more space in a power pose, are we perceived to be more powerful in the eyes of others?
Featuring Arnaud Desbiez, president and founder of a Brazilian NGO called ICAS (The Wild Animal Conservation Institute) and Dr Daniel Gurney, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Hertfordshire. Produced and presented by Emily Knight and Becky Ripley.
On radio
Broadcast
- Mon 4 May 202613:45BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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Naturebang
Making sense of what it means to be human by looking to the natural world.
