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Source:
Scott Hemenover, 785-532-0609; e-mail: shemenov@k-state.edu
News release prepared by: Mark Berry, 785-532-6415
Friday,
May 10, 2002
GET
OUT OF THAT FUNK - PERSISTENT BAD MOOD LEADS TO POOR HEALTH
MANHATTAN
-- We've all known what it's like to have the blues.
Depression
and anger can make you sick, literally. But a new study at Kansas
State University shows that some people take longer to snap out
of it -- which can lead to health problems -- while cheerful people
tend to stay happy longer.
Psychologists
have known for a while that some people experience emotions more
intensely than others. But little was known about how people differ
in the amount of time they experience an emotion before it fades
away, said Scott Hemenover, an assistant professor of psychology
at K-State.
In
the past, neurotic people were defined by how strongly they felt
depressed or angry, not how long those emotions lasted. Likewise,
extroverts were defined by how strongly they felt happy, not how
long they felt happy. Extroverts are also associated with sociability
and the desire to seek excitement.
Hemenover
performed a study that found that people with different personality
types have different rates of mood decay. People with neurotic tendencies
hold on to a bad mood longer than other people. Extroverts tend
to stay in a positive mood longer than average people.
"For
example, if I go to a funny movie with a friend, we will both be
happy after the movie. But after 20 minutes, I might still be happy
and my friend has faded to neutral because I'm more extroverted,"
Hemenover said.
Hemenover
presented a report on his study at the Midwestern Psychological
Association conference in Chicago May 3. The study can give a clue
on improving the health of people who have problems with negative
emotions like anger or depression, Hemenover said.
"Maintaining
a negative mood for a long period of time is harmful to your health.
People think that getting stressed and anxious is bad for you. The
key isn't how stressed you are, but how long you are stressed,"
he said. "Staying stressed for a long time can impair your
immune and cardiovascular functions."
Hemenover
said people who tend to stay in a bad mood for a long time can learn
to use strategies that will help them snap out of it faster. "Neurotics
see the world as a nasty place. If you teach them to view the world
in a positive way, and to think their way out of feeling bad by
rephrasing things in a positive way, it can help their health,"
Hemenover said.
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