Relationships With Friends May Hinge On How Well You Know Them

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 26 Mar 2011 - 3:00 PDT

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'Relationships With Friends May Hinge On How Well You Know Them'

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How does your best friend feel when people act needy? Or, about people being dishonest? What do they think when others seem uncomfortable in social situations? According to an upcoming study in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, if you don't know - your relationship may pay a price.

There are lots of ways to know someone's personality. You can say "she's an extrovert" or "she's usually happy." You may also know how he or she reacts to different situations and other people's behavior. "It's a more detailed way of understanding personality," says Charity A. Friesen, a graduate student at Wilfrid Laurier University, who co-wrote the new paper with Lara K. Kammrath. "You might know the person is extroverted when they're out with their friends but more introverted when they're in a new situation." When a person is faced with one of a list of situations, then how does he or she behave? Friesen identifies this as an "if-then profile."

Friesen and Kammrath recruited university students to take part in the study. Each student was asked to get a friend to participate in the study with them. Then each of the participants individually filled out an online survey. This included a list of "triggers" - descriptions of behaviors that someone might find annoying. One example was the word "skepticism" which was described as when someone is overly disbelieving of information that he/she receives, when he/she questions things that are generally accepted, or when he/she is very hard to convince of something. The list also included gullibility, social timidity, social boldness, perfectionism, obliviousness and several dozen other possible triggers. For each behavior, each respondent answered a question about how much this triggers them and how much it triggers their friend.

Some people knew their friends' triggers well; others had almost no idea what set their friends off. And that made a difference to the friendship. People who had more knowledge of their friend's if-then profile of triggers had better relationships. They had less conflict with the friend and less frustration with the relationship. Other research has shown that it's not that hard to come up with a list of traits that describe someone; casual acquaintances can do it. "But, if I'm close to someone, I can really start to learn the if-then profiles, and that's what's going to pay off in my relationship," Friesen says.

Source:
Tiffany Harrington
Association for Psychological Science

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

I wish I got paid to make

posted by Christie on 29 Mar 2011 at 6:59 am

Some people really notice and empathize with other peoples' reactions and feelings, while others are too busy thinking about themselves to notice much of anything. It's no wonder that the latter group will sometimes get "surprised" in an unhappy way when they do one of the "triggers" and cause conflict with a friend.

I'll bet a follow-up million dollar study would discover that this self-centered group will then blame the friend for any conflict - "I didn't know she's so weird about that!"

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Much ado about nothing

posted by Ellen on 26 Mar 2011 at 9:19 am

So you're saying that the better you know someone, the better you know what might upset them? Did we really need a study to tell us that? And why is this considered medical news?

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