THE TIMID DIE YOUNG

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THE TIMID DIE YOUNG

Those who are fearful are likely to die younger than their dauntless counterparts.

Research has shown that at least in rats that the fearful type may  meet their maker sooner.
Researchers  have  for  the  first  time connected a personality trait—fear of novelty—to an early death. McClintock,  psychologists  at  the University  of  Chicago,  presented unfamiliar bowls, tunnels and bricks to a  group  of  young  male  rats.  Those hesitant to explore the mystery objects were classified as “neophobic.” The  researchers  found  that  the neophobic  rats  produced  high  levels  of  stress  hormones,  called glucocorticoids—typically involved in the  fight-or-flight  stress  response— when  faced  with  strange  situations. Those  rats  continued  to  have  high levels  of  the  hormones  at  random times throughout their lives, indicating that timidity is a fixed and stable trait. The team then set out to examine the cumulative effects of this personality trait on the rats’ health. Timid  rats  were  60  percent  more likely  to  die  at  any  given  time  than were  their  outgoing  brothers.  The causes of death were similar for both groups. “One hypothesis as to why the neophobic rats died earlier is that the stress  hormones  negatively  affected their immune system,” Cavigelli says. Neophobes  died,  on  average,  three months  before  their  rat  brothers,  a significant gap, considering that most rats lived only two years. Shyness—the human equivalent of neophobia—can be detected in infants as young as 14 months. Shy people also  produce  more  stress  hormones than  “average,”  or  thrill-seeking humans.  But  introverts  don't necessarily  stay  shy  for  life,  as  rats apparently  do.  Jerome  Kagan,  a professor  of  psychology  at  Harvard University,  has  found  that  while         15  out  of  every  100  children  will          be  born  with  a  shy  temperament,           only  three  will  appear  shy  as          adults.  None,  however,  will  be extroverts. Extrapolating from the doomed fate of  neophobic  rats  to  their  human counterparts is difficult. “But it means that  something  as  simple  as  a personality  trait  could  have physiological consequences,” Cavigelli says.
No wonder,those who get easily benumbed are vulnerable to cardiovascular problem such as heart failure, irregular heartbeat etc when they are subjected to excessive fear of noise, accident,touch and other hypertensives activities .

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