- USDA Gets Tougher on Salmonella in Raw Breaded Chicken Products
- Fragments of Bird Flu Virus Found in 1 in 5 Milk Samples
- Clients Got HIV Through ‘Vampire Facial’ Microneedling Treatments
- Take the Stairs & Step Up to Longer Life
- ‘Drug Take Back Day’ is Saturday: Check for Leftover Opioids in Your Home
- Loneliness Can Shorten Lives of Cancer Survivors
- A Stolen Dog Feels Like Losing a Child, Study Finds
- Healthier Hearts in Middle Age Help Black Women’s Brains Stay Strong
- Better Scans Spot Hidden Inflammation in MS Patients
- Which Patients and Surgeries Are ‘High Risk’ for Seniors?
Making Friends 101: What Works for College Freshmen
Personality plays a major role in the ability of new college students to make and maintain friendships, researchers say.
To examine how personality affected new friendships, they assessed 273 first-year students at the start of school in Poland and again three months later. In particular, the investigators looked at narcissism and emotional intelligence.
Narcissism — high but undeserved self-regard and a constant desire for self-affirmation from others — was found to be a turn-off. Students with high levels of narcissism were popular at first, but their popularity increased less over time compared to people who were less narcissistic, the study found.
On the other hand, the popularity of emotionally intelligent people increased more over time than the popularity of those with less emotional intelligence.
Emotional intelligence is “the ability to perceive, use, understand and manage emotions,” said the researchers led by Anna Czarna, a social-personality psychologist and researcher at Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland.
The study was published online Sept. 27 in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
“Our results suggest that narcissism is rather disadvantageous and that emotional intelligence is rather advantageous for long-term popularity,” the study authors said in a journal news release.
It’s likely that the advantage inherent in emotional intelligence isn’t observable at early stages of relationships, the researchers said. That’s because opportunities to apply emotional skills — such as recognizing other people’s emotional states and giving effective support — might emerge only as the relationship develops, they explained.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offers college health and safety resources.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.