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Narcissism 'short-lived way to popularity'

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New students, in the first awkward days of making friends at university, are being told that being a narcissist only makes you popular in the short term.

Researchers at the University of Glasgow were part of an international project looking at personality types and friendships among students.

It suggested those with "excessively positive self-regard" were the initial front-runners in making friends.

But after early popularity, narcissism became a "disadvantageous" trait.

For new students feeling overwhelmed by brash attention-seekers, the research offers hope that a more subtle approach will make them more likely to have friends and be popular in the long-run.

The study, carried out by Dr Philip Leifeld in Glasgow and researchers in the US, Germany and the Jagiellonian University, in Krakow, Poland, looked at the dynamics of "peer popularity".

Image caption,

Students with "emotional intelligence" become more popular over time

It tracked 15 different peer groups of about 20 students from the first days of university to three months later to follow the fate of narcissists who at the outset were the centre of attention.

The study, headed in Krakow by psychologist Anna Czarna, defined a narcissist as someone who had an "excessively positive, undeserved self-regard" and a "constant desire for external self-affirmation".

Researchers compared the progress of the narcissists to that of students who were "emotionally intelligent" - and found that after a slower start, the emotionally intelligent began to gain friendships, and in a way that was more likely to last.

Emotional intelligence was associated with a greater awareness of other people's emotions, showing empathy and caring for other people.

Such traits were not necessarily immediately apparent - but the study found that the emotionally intelligent gradually grew in popularity, while the appeal of narcissists began to fade.

A feature of narcissists was to "denigrate" others as a way of asserting their own position - and that as this happened they began to provoke "significant dislike".

Dr Czarna said the project allowed researchers to examine the role of emotional behaviour in predicting popularity.

"Our results suggest that narcissism is rather disadvantageous and that emotional intelligence is rather advantageous for long-term popularity," the study said.