Thursday, August 22, 2013

Fertility problems? Your personality could be to blame: Moody men and fussy women have fewer children

  • Surprising study examined link between personality and birth rates
  • It found extrovert and open men, such as Jamie Oliver, have more children
  • Neurotic men and conscientious women more likely to have fewer




  • Could Monica's meticulous personality teamed with Chandler's neuroses be the real reason why the popular TV couple couldn't conceive?
    Could Monica's meticulous personality teamed with Chandler's neuroses be the real reason why the popular TV couple couldn't conceive?
    Worried about your chances of having children? The secret could be to lighten-up, say researchers.
    According to a new study published in the European Journal of Personality, men with neurotic personality traits are having fewer children compared to previous generations.
    The study examined the effect of personality on how likely a person is to have children, using extensive survey and birth registry data from Norway. 
    It also found that men who are extroverted and open tend to have more children, while women who rank as conscientious on personality tests tend to have fewer children, regardless of which generation they are from. 
    The study could have important implications for population dynamics at a time when fertility rates across developed countries have fallen to below replacement rates. 
    Personality effects may be one factor contributing to the decline of fertility rates in Europe, says International Institution Applied Systems Analysis' Vegard Skirbekk, who led the study.
    Population changes are an important factor for projecting future changes in sustainability, climate, energy and food security.
    In particular, Skirbekk notes the decline in childbearing among neurotic men - neurotic meaning individuals who tend to be moody and emotional.
     

    The study found that the effect only applies for men born after 1957. Skirbekk says that the change in these men's fertility could be due to new norms in having children, for example that couples today wait longer to have children and couples tend to test each other out more before committing to raising children together.
    The study was made possible by Norway's very detailed birth records and an integrated personality survey, which allowed the researchers to examine the connections between both female and male fertility and personality. 
    Evidence extrovert men may be more fertile: Family-man and TV personality Jamie Oliver with his wife Jools and four children Poppy Honey, Daisy Boos, Petal Blossom and Buddy Bear
    Extrovert men may be more fertile: Family-man and TV personality Jamie Oliver with his wife Jools and four children Poppy Honey, Daisy Boos, Petal Blossom and Buddy Bear

    'For men, often you don't know exactly how many children they have because information is not matched in the registries, but for Norway we have very exact information' says Skirbekk.
    While the study only considers Norway, Skirbekk says that the findings likely apply more widely. 'Norway is a leader country in terms of family dynamics,' says Skirbekk, 
    'Many trends that have been observed first in Norway - increasing cohabitation, divorce rates, and later marriage, for example - have then been observed later in many other parts of the world. 
    'Of course it remains to be seen if this phenomenon will also spread.'


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2399848/Fertility-problems-Your-personality-blame-Moody-men-fussy-women-fewer-children.html#ixzz2cibI06Xq 
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