Personality traits 'contagious' among children: study

This is important because some personality traits can help children succeed in life, while others can hold them back.

Update: 2017-02-04 10:32 GMT
Children whose play partners were extroverted or hard-working became similar to these peers over time. (Photo: Pixabay)

Washington: Pre-school children who spend time around one another tend to take on each others' personalities, according to a first of its kind study which
suggests that personality is shaped by environment and not just genes.

"Our finding, that personality traits are 'contagious' among children, flies in the face of common assumptions that personality is ingrained and can not be changed," said Jennifer Watling Neal from Michigan State University in the
US. "This is important because some personality traits can help children succeed in life, while others can hold them back," said Neal.

The researchers studied two preschool classes for an entire school year, analysing personality traits and social networks for one class of three-year-olds and one class of four-year-olds. Children whose play partners were extroverted or hard-working became similar to these peers over time.

Children whose play partners were overanxious and easily frustrated, however, did not take on these particular traits. The study is the first to examine these personality traits in young children over time. Emily Durbin, associate professor at Michigan State University said kids are having a bigger effect on each other
than people may realise.

"Parents spend a lot of their time trying to teach their child to be patient, to be a good listener, not to be impulsive," said Durbin. "However this was not their parents or their teachers affecting them - it was their friends. It turns out that
three- and four-year-olds are being change agents," Durbin added. The study was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

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