< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Pervez Musharraf ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / 2008 / January 2008 / January 22, 2008
Extroverts more likely to be obese, worriers thin

Top News

Chiranjeevi launches names his new political party - Praja Rajyam

India proposes October 1 as date for start of LOC trade

Pak-US ties resilient, will withstand difficulties: Haqqani

Brit pupils to get art of happiness lessons to beat the blues!

First of its kind Youth Assembly sensitizing youth towards community service and social entrepreneurship to be held in Hyderabad city

Pakistan may play ODI series against Lanka

Software that lets a chopper learn aerial tricks by watching another

Sexual satisfaction is less about biology and more about psychology

Extroverts more likely to be obese, worriers thin

Are you obese? Well, blame it on your social nature, for a new study has found that outgoing and sociable people are more likely to be overweight, while anxious and worried types tend to be thin.

Sydney, Jan 22 : Are you obese? Well, blame it on your social nature, for a new study has found that outgoing and sociable people are more likely to be overweight, while anxious and worried types tend to be thin.

Masako Kakizaki of Tohoku University and colleagues questioned 30,000 people, aged between 40 and 64, in northeastern Japan about their height and weight. The participants were also given a personality test.

The researchers found that extroverts had a greater chance than other people to have a body mass index (BMI) of more than 25, a commonly used definition of overweight.

After controlling for other factors, such as smoking, men in the most outgoing group were 1.73 times more likely to be obese than their most introvert counterparts.

Meanwhile sociable women were 1.53 times as likely to be obese.

On the contrary, those who had the most anxious personalities were twice as likely as the least anxious to be underweight, or have a BMI of less than 18.5, the researchers said.

"These results may provide clues to devising more effective measures for preventing overweight, obesity or underweight," News.com.au quoted the researchers, as saying.

The study is published in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research.

ANI

September 7, 2008

September 6, 2008

September 5, 2008

September 4, 2008

September 3, 2008

September 2, 2008