Infatuation Rules
Photo: Alena Darmel
One such difference is in the personality trait of neuroticism—the tendency to experience anxiety, depression, and negative emotions generally—on which women (on average) score higher than men.
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Read More »That women and men behave differently in some ways, on average, is not exactly newsworthy. What may be more surprising is that some of these gender differences are found consistently worldwide, and are actually greater in countries with cultures and institutions that more heavily promote and enforce gender equality. One such difference is in the personality trait of neuroticism—the tendency to experience anxiety, depression, and negative emotions generally—on which women (on average) score higher than men. What accounts for this difference? Nicholas Kerry and Damian R. Murray of Tulane University found that differences between U.S. students in grip strength—the strength used in a bone-crushing handshake, which is strongly correlated with other forms of muscular strength—partly explained gender differences in self-reported anxiety, but did not explain gender differences in self-reported depression. Stronger people were less anxious, and men were, on average, considerably stronger than women. Therefore, much of the gender difference in anxiety was accounted for by the gender difference in strength.
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Read More »We did find that the gender difference in fearfulness, more than any of the other three components of emotionality, was partly explained by the gender difference in grip strength. For example, the average fearfulness score of the 8% of women who were stronger than the average man was lower than that of the 22.5% of the men who were the most fearful. In two of the five samples of university students, the gender difference in grip strength completely explained the gender difference in fearfulness—indeed, after statistically controlling for grip strength, the gender difference in fearfulness disappeared entirely. As we expected, the gender difference in grip strength also explained a considerable proportion of the gender difference in anxiety, and it explained very little of the gender difference in sentimentality. Surprisingly, the gender difference in grip strength also explained a considerable proportion of the gender difference in emotional dependence.
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