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The people’s game: evolutionary perspectives on the behavioural neuroscience of football fandom

Title: The people’s game: evolutionary perspectives on the behavioural neuroscience of football fandom
Authors: Butler, Matt; Brar, Gurjot; Abed, Riadh; O'Connell, Henry
Publisher Information: frontiersin
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: University of Limerick: Institutional Repository (ULIR)
Subject Terms: evolution; psychiatry; football; soccer; sports fan behaviour; Sports science and exercise
Description: Association football (soccer) is the world’s most popular sport. Transculturally, fans invest significant resources following their teams, suggesting underlying psychological universals with evolutionary origins. Although evolutionary science can help illuminate the ultimate causes of human behaviour, there have been limited modern evolutionary perspectives on football fandom. In this paper, we consider evolutionary perspectives on football fandom from a behavioural neuroscientific standpoint. We discuss how the appeal of football may arise through the low-scoring and highly variable outcomes of games; we relate this to the neuroscience of reward prediction errors and motivation. We highlight recent research on the psychobiological responses to ritual, including endorphin release, which may reduce anxiety and facilitate group bonding. We discuss the prosocial and anxiety-sublimating effects of the matchday ritual and argue that football may be a special case whereby ritual behaviour does have a small effect on the outcome of interest. We discuss the psychology of ingroup and outgroup effects of fandom and argue that, although resource scarcity can sometimes lead to aggression, that larger inter-group effects can be positive. We comment on the socioemotional developmental aspects of football fandom, and note how group identification may lead to displays of sacrifice. We finish with a discussion of whether, in the era of social prescribing, football could be seen as a psychiatrist’s tool. We conclude with suggestions on how the positive aspects of football can be emphasised through evolutionary perspectives, and how future research on football fandom may inform evolutionary understanding of humans writ large. ; Investigating psilocybin as a novel treatment for functional neurological disorder: probing the functional magnetic resonance imaging response ; Investigating psilocybin as a novel treatment for functional neurological disorder: probing the functional magnetic resonance imaging response§227515/Z/23/Z
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: School of Medicine; Frontiers in Psychology 15, 1517295; https://hdl.handle.net/10344/14302; https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1517295
DOI: 10.34961/researchrepository-ul.28342487
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1517295
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/10344/14302; https://doi.org/10.34961/researchrepository-ul.28342487; https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1517295
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.C04F964F
Database: BASE