Valdosta Daily Times

National, International News

August 12, 2012

Slate: Paranoid people have good cause

WASHINGTON — Yippee. Another study about how your private insecurities are to blame for troubled work relationships and probably everything else that's going wrong in your life. Researchers from the London Business School have determined that self-conscious, paranoid people are more likely to be gossiped about behind their backs, because they're so insanely self-conscious and paranoid.

In a paper called "Do I want to know? How the motivation to acquire relationship-threatening information in groups contributes to paranoid thought, suspicion behavior and social rejection," a team led by Jennifer Mason Carr notes that it's normal and healthy to wonder what others think of you — up to a point. If you seem too invested in the question or sniff around too eagerly for hints, your peers get weirded out. And then they develop a negative opinion of you, based on the fact that you were so worried they might have a negative opinion of you.

To find out how MARTI ("motivation to acquire relationship-threatening information") messes with people, Carr and her colleagues assigned 102 test subjects a set of tasks. The researchers then implied that some participants were doing a better job on the tasks than others — and asked each subject if he or she wanted to exclude certain group members from the mission. People who showed high MARTI qualities were, on average, 3.63 times more likely to get the ax than less paranoid people.

In other words, you'd better not care too much about what the world thinks, or you'll become a pariah! Of course, someone reasonably at peace with the idea of being disliked would not obsess over just that possibility — whereas if Carr's research worries you, it may already be too late: Your office probably has you pegged as a nut job. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy: Those who are anxious about others' disapproval will ironically act in ways that attract that disapproval.

Or, as the researchers put it:

We propose that group members vary in their motivation to search for diagnostic information about whether other group members seek to cause them indirect harm. . . . We hypothesize that this motivation is associated with paranoid thought patterns and suspicion behaviors that can anger other group members and lead them to reject those who actively search for evidence that others are secretly trying to harm them.

Ugh. I hate studies like this. What are the paranoiacs supposed to do now? I can't help thinking that the ethical response to such results would have been to keep a lid on them, out of kindness to all the self-conscious neurotics out there who might otherwise amplify their misery by imagining conspiracies (and annoying co-workers) with renewed vigor.

Text Only
National, International News
  • Britain Northern Irel_Rich copy.jpg G8 exposes rift among leaders on Syria

    Deep differences over Syria’s fierce civil war clouded a summit of world leaders Monday, with Russian President Vladimir Putin defiantly rejecting calls from the U.S., Britain and France to halt his political and military support for Syrian leader Bashar Assad’s regime.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Turkey Protests_Rich copy.jpg Unions give lift to Turkish protest movement

    Turkish labor groups fanned a wave of defiance against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s authority, leading rallies and a one-day strike to support activists whose two-week standoff with the government has shaken the country’s secular democracy.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Deferred Action One Y_Rich copy.jpg For young immigrants, a delayed coming of age

    As a child, Jorge Tume used to sit and do homework as his parents cleaned the desks and floors of a concrete company in Miami. When he was done, he’d take out the trash and help finish cleaning.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Colorado Wildfires_Rich copy.jpg Investigators ‘zeroing in’ on Colo. wildfire start

    Sheriff’s officials say they have now recorded more than 500 homes leveled by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Hoffa Search_Rich copy.jpg Still no Hoffa after 1st day of latest search

    Federal agents revived the hunt for the remains of Jimmy Hoffa on Monday, digging around in a suburban Detroit field where a reputed Mafia captain says the Teamsters boss’ body was buried.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • AP720618016 copy.jpg Today in History for Tuesday, June 18, 2013

    Today is Tuesday, June 18, the 169th day of 2013. There are 196 days left in the year.

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Mideast Iraq Violence_Rich.jpg Series of attacks kill 51 people across Iraq

    A blistering string of apparently coordinated bombings and a shooting across Iraq killed at least 51 and wounded dozens Sunday, spreading fear throughout the county in a wave of violence that is raising the prospect of a return to widespread sectarian killing a decade after a U.S.-led invasion.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • Turkey Protests_Rich(1).jpg Turkey unrest goes on despite end to park protest

    Riot police cordoned off streets, set up roadblocks and fired tear gas and water cannon to prevent anti-government protesters from converging on Istanbul’s central Taksim Square on Sunday, unbowed even as Turkey’s prime minister addressed hundreds of thousands of supporters a few kilometers away.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • US Syria No Fly Zone_Rich copy.jpg Iraq no-fly zone viewed as symbol for one in Syria

    The Obama administration, trying to avoid getting drawn deeper into Syria’s civil war, has pointed to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 as a symbol of what can go wrong when America’s military wades into Middle East conflicts.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • Colorado Wildfires_Rich copy.jpg Steady rain falls as crews work against Colo. fire

    With evacuees anxious to return, firefighters worked Sunday to dig up and extinguish hot spots to protect homes spared by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado’s history.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

Top News
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Poll

Should the government have access to your phone, emails?

Yes, always.
No, never.
Only in times of national emergency.
     View Results