ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Quirky

This is how office space defines your personality

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 27 (ANI): Do you keep your personal space in office messy? You might appear as less agreeable and neurotic, suggests a study.

ANI Nov 27, 2018 17:12 IST googleads

Representational Image

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 27 (ANI): Do you keep your personal space in office messy? You might appear as less agreeable and neurotic, suggests a study.
Psychologists from University of Michigan explored the degree of messiness in one's workspace and how it affects perceptions of the owner's personality.
The findings appear in the journal Personality and Individual Differences.
In three experiments, about 160 participants were randomly assigned to sit in a researcher's office that was clean and uncluttered, or in another office that was either "somewhat" or "very" messy.
All offices were identically decorated to suggest that it belonged to a male researcher. They included various personal items, such as a baseball cap hanging on a door hook, a cup containing candy, a baby photo, and science books and academic journals in a bookcase.
In the neat office (office A), papers were neatly stacked on the desk, books and journals were upright on the bookshelves, file drawers had typewritten labels, and all garbage was in the wastebasket.
The "somewhat" messy office (office B in experiment 1) had books tilted over on the shelves, a textbook and papers lying on the floor, and a wall clock an hour off. The "very" messy office (office B in experiments 2 and 3) appeared even dirtier, more disorganised and had increased clutter.
Participants tried to guess the researcher's personality based on the office's appearance--rating the person's extraversion (social), agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism and openness to experience. In each experiment, participants thought that the office B researcher (messy office) was less conscientious than the office A researcher (organised office).
"When there are cues related to less cleanliness, order, organization and more clutter in an owner's primary territory, perceivers' ascribe lower conscientiousness to the owner, whether that owner is a worker in the real world (office), a job-seeker (apartment), a student (bedroom) or a researcher at a university (lab office)," said lead author Terrence Horgan.
In everyday life, if people think that a person might be careless, cranky and uncaring because his/her office is very messy, then these impressions could subsequently impact how--or even whether--they decide to deal with him/her in the future, either on a personal or professional basis, the researchers say.
In experiments 2 and 3, participants also thought that the office B researcher was less agreeable and more neurotic than the office A researcher. The messier offices led to some participants thinking the owner possessed one or more negative personality traits.
The researchers said from the perspective of perceivers, high neuroticism, low conscientiousness and low agreeableness could signal potentially undesirable qualities in an employee. The bottom line: Perceivers' impressions of targets matter in terms of how they subsequently treat them.
"Once trait information about a target becomes activated in perceivers' minds, either consciously or unconsciously, that information can subsequently affect how they process information about, the types of questions they ask of, and how they behave toward the target, possibly bringing out the very trait information that they expected to see from the target in the first place," said study co-author Sarah Dyszlewski. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Relationships

Emotional companionship linked to physical well-being: Research

Emotional companionship linked to physical well-being: Research

According to a new study published in Social Psychology and Personality Science, impact of your close relationships may alter how your body operates.

Read More
Relationships

Personality traits associated with satisfaction:Study

Personality traits associated with satisfaction:Study

A recent research published by the American Psychological Association claimed certain personality traits are associated with satisfaction in life. Despite the changes people may experience in social roles and responsibilities over the course of their adult lives, that association is stable regardless of age.

Read More
Others

Personality, satisfaction related throughout adult lifespan

Personality, satisfaction related throughout adult lifespan

According to research published by the American Psychological Association, certain personality traits are associated with life satisfaction, and that association remains stable regardless of age, despite changes in social roles and responsibilities that people may experience throughout their adult lives.

Read More
Quirky

Your favourite songs could reveal your attachment style

Your favourite songs could reveal your attachment style

What does having a particular artist on repeat tell us about how to -- or how not to -- navigate our romantic lives, friendships and family ties? Whether it's Adele or The Weeknd on your go-to playlist, the lyrics can say a lot about you, and it's all related to attachment styles, or how people typically think, feel and act in relationships.

Read More
Quirky

Some people may be susceptible to fake news, suggests study

Some people may be susceptible to fake news, suggests study

Washington [US], October 20 (ANI): The findings of a new study at the Human-Computer-Media Institute at Julius-Maximilians-Universitat Wurzburg (JMU) in Bavaria, Germany suggest that people who have dark personality traits are susceptible to fake news.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.