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Highly Neurotic Women Tend to be Less Physically Active

by Dr. Meenakshy Varier on August 29, 2020 at 2:43 PM

Highly neurotic individuals tend to be less physically active. Two important personality traits, extraversion, and neuroticism help to understand why some people are physically active, and others are not.


A new study from the Gerontology Research Center and the Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences at the University of Jyv�skyl�, Finland, shows that the role of personality may vary depending on how physical activity is measured.

‘Neuroticism, among women, is associated with lower leisure time and decreased willingness to participate in physical activities. The role of personality could be used to help identify risk groups for inactivity and promote physical activity among them.’

Personality traits reflect people's characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving. A study at the University of Jyv�skyl� focused on two traits: extraversion and neuroticism. Individuals who score high in extraversion are typically social, active and talkative. High scores in neuroticism indicate a tendency to have negative feelings, such as anxiety and self-pity.

The results showed that high extraversion and low neuroticism were linked to higher leisure time physical activity in middle-aged women. Women who scored high in extraversion reported more physical activity, but this was not seen in the physical activity measured by an activity monitor. Women who scored high in neuroticism reported less physical activity and had less physical activity captured by activity monitors.

"Even though both methods assess the frequency, duration and intensity of physical activity, they measure partly different aspects of physical activity," explains postdoctoral researcher Tiia Kek�l�inen from the Gerontology Research Center. "Activity monitors are better at capturing all daily stepping activities whereas self-reporting better accounts for all types of physical activities. Therefore, it is natural that results are partly different between different physical activity measures. It is important to use both ways to assess physical activity behavior."

Personality traits may explain individual tendencies to estimate one's own physical activity level.

Personality may explain the way individuals assess their own level of physical activity. The results showed that older adults scoring high in neuroticism reported less physical activity than what was measured by accelerometers.

"Neuroticism describes a predisposition to experience negative feelings," Kek�l�inen says. "In addition to lower willingness to participate in physical activities, this kind of tendency seems to be related to under-reporting physical activity behavior. The information about the role of personality could be used to help identify risk groups for inactivity and in physical activity promotion work."

Two larger research projects conducted at the Gerontology Research Center and Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences provided data for the study: from a total of 314 older men and women aged 70 to 85 years who participated in the PASSWORD study, and from 1,098 middle-aged women aged 47 to 55 years who participated in the ERMA study.

Source: Eurekalert

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