PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Two stressed people equals less stress

New USC Marshall School of Business research shows how emotional similarity reduces stress

2014-01-30
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Amy Blumenthal
amyblume@marshall.usc.edu
213-740-5552
USC Marshall School of Business
Two stressed people equals less stress New USC Marshall School of Business research shows how emotional similarity reduces stress Does giving a speech in public stress you out? Or writing a big presentation for your boss? What about skydiving?

One way to cope, according to a new study from Sarah Townsend, assistant professor of management and organization at the USC Marshall School of Business, is to share your feelings with someone who is having a similar emotional reaction to the same scenario.

Townsend said that one of her study's main discoveries is the benefit gained by spending time and conversing with someone whose emotional response is in line with yours. Such an alignment may be helpful in the workplace.

"For instance, when you're putting together an important presentation or working on a high-stakes project, these are situations that can be threatening and you may experience heightened stress," said Townsend. "But talking with a colleague who shares your emotional state can help decrease this stress."

For "Are You Feeling What I'm Feeling? Emotional Similarity Buffers Stress," in Social Psychological and Personality Science, Townsend and co-authors Heejung S. Kim of UC Santa Barbara and Batja Mesquita of University of Leuven, Belgium, had 52 female undergraduate students participate in a study on public speaking.

Participants were paired up and asked to give a speech while being video-recorded. However, prior to this, the pairs of participants were encouraged to discuss with each other how they were feeling about making their speeches. Each participant's levels of the stress-related hormone cortisol were measured before, during and after their speeches.

The results "show that sharing a threatening situation with a person who is in a similar emotional state, in terms of her overall emotional profile, buffers individuals from experiencing the heightened levels of stress that typically accompany threat," according to the study. In other words, when you're facing a threatening situation, interacting with someone who is feeling similarly to you decreases the stress you feel, said Townsend.

"Imagine you are one of two people working on an important project: if you have a lot riding on this project, it is a potentially stressful situation," Townsend said. "But having a coworker with a similar emotional profile can help reduce your experience of stress."

Townsend, who recently launched the Culture, Diversity, and Psychophysiology Lab at Marshall, noted that motivating her research is the importance of cross-cultural understandings in the global marketplace. She hopes to continue her work by examining how developing emotional similarity can benefit people from different cultural backgrounds who must learn to function together in the workplace or the university classroom.

Ambitious professionals take note: According to Townsend, "We've found that emotional similarity is important. So now the question is: How do we get people to be more similar? What can you do to generate this emotional similarity with a coworker? Or, as a manager, how can you encourage emotional similarity among your team?"

So the next time you go skydiving, remember to buddy up with someone who feels the same way about it that you do.

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study measures how well Asian carp prevention effort will work

2014-01-30
Scientists from the University of Notre Dame, Resources for the Future, and the U.S. Forest Service present their findings of the effectiveness of different Asian carp prevention barriers ...

U of Maryland study: Partnership may help address cancer, health disparities

2014-01-30
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, January ...

Puzzling question in bacterial immune system answered

2014-01-30
A central question has been answered regarding a protein that plays an essential role in the bacterial immune system and is ...

Asteroid diversity points to a 'snow globe' solar system

2014-01-30
Our solar system seems like a neat and orderly place, with small, rocky worlds near the Sun and big, gaseous worlds farther out, all eight planets following orbital paths unchanged ...

From rivers to landslides: Charting the slopes of sediment transport

2014-01-30
In the Earth Surface Dynamics Lab at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) the behavior of rivers is modeled through the use of artificial rivers—flumes—through ...

Extended outcomes from APBI show tumor control, breast cosmesis and minimal late toxicity

2014-01-30
Fairfax, Va., January 29, 2014— Long-term (five-year) outcomes of breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) after ...

EBRT reduces risk of subsequent mastectomy in patients with invasive breast cancer

2014-01-30
Fairfax, Va., January 29, 2014— Standard external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) provided a higher breast preservation rate than brachytherapy in women age 66 and ...

Screening for transformed human mesenchymal stromal cells with tumorigenic potential

2014-01-30
Researchers at Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam, The Netherlands, led by Dr. Qiuwei Pan and Dr. Luc van der Laan, have discovered that spontaneous tumorigenic ...

Study uncovers molecular keys to invasive bladder cancer

2014-01-30
HOUSTON – The once sketchy landscape of the molecular defects behind bladder cancer now ...

Sea level variations escalating along eastern Gulf of Mexico coast

2014-01-30
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Around the globe, sea levels typically rise a little in summer and fall again in winter. Now, a new study shows that, from the Florida Keys to southern Alabama, those fluctuations ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Connections with nature in protected areas

Rodriguez and Phadatare selected for SME's 30 Under 30

Nontraditional benefits play key role in retaining the under-35 government health worker

UC Irvine-led study finds global embrace of integrative cancer care

From shiloh shepherds to chihuahuas, study finds that the majority of modern dogs have detectable wolf ancestry

Ancient wolves on remote Baltic Sea island reveal link to prehistoric humans

Scientists detect new climate pattern in the tropics

‘Mental model’ approach shows promise in reducing susceptibility to misconceptions about mRNA vaccination

Want actionable climate knowledge at scale? Consider these three pathways

Blood formation: Two systems with different competencies

Golden retriever and human behaviours are driven by same genes

Calcium-sensitive switch boosts the efficacy of cancer drugs

LSU LCMC Health Cancer Center researchers uncover key immune differences in triple-negative breast cancer

University of Cincinnati study advances understanding of pancreatic cancer treatment resistance

An integrated approach to cybersecurity is key to reducing critical infrastructure vulnerability

Probing new mechanisms of depression and anxiety

What can psychedelics teach us about the sense of self?

An integrated monolithic synaptic device for C-tactile afferent perception and robot emotional interaction

‘Zap-and-freeze’ technique successfully used to watch human brain cell communication

Prebiotic in diet linked to less impulsivity in gambling rats with TBI

Gestational weight gain and pregnancy outcomes after GLP-1 receptor agonist discontinuation

Increasing postpartum use of GLP-1 receptor agonists

Patients who discontinued GLP-1s had more weight gain, complications during pregnancy

Untreated sleep apnea raises risk of Parkinson’s, study finds

Prevalence, characteristics, and genetic architecture of avoidant/restrictive food intake phenotypes

Cardiometabolic parameter change by weight regain on tirzepatide withdrawal in adults with obesity

US burden of disorders affecting the nervous system

Social media detox and youth mental health

One in two people in the US is affected by a neurological disease or disorder

Colliding ribosomes signal cellular stress

[Press-News.org] Two stressed people equals less stress
New USC Marshall School of Business research shows how emotional similarity reduces stress