Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Mothers make girls more emotionally intelligent than boys

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Nov, 2014 10:05 AM
    Compared with their conversations with sons, mothers include more emotional words and content in their conversations with daughters, making women more emotionally intelligent than men in the process, finds new research.
     
    However, as mothers use more emotional words than fathers, they are also unconsciously reinforcing gender stereotypes in their children, the study said.
     
    "Our study suggests that parent-child conversations are gendered, with mothers talking more expressively to their daughters than their sons," said Harriet Tenenbaum from the University of Surrey in Britain.
     
    For the study, researchers engaged 65 Spanish mothers and fathers and their four and six-year-old children in a storytelling task and a conversation about past experiences.
     
    They examined their use of language and the number of words associated with emotion.
     
    Daughters displayed a higher level of emotional literacy than boys with words such as 'happy', 'sad' and 'worried' used frequently, found the study.
     
    This inevitably leads to girls growing up more attuned to their emotions than boys, pointed out Harriet.
     
    Having this edge to be more expressive and cope well with emotions may matter more than ever at the workplace, as more companies are starting to recognise the advantages of high emotional intelligence when it comes to positions such as sales, teams and leadership, said Harriet.
     
    The study appeared in The British Journal of Developmental Psychology.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    So You Think Your Kid's Ready For A Rock Festival? One Dad's Tips From The Trenches

    So You Think Your Kid's Ready For A Rock Festival? One Dad's Tips From The Trenches
    A few months ago, I had an epiphany that a good father would take his 12-year-old daughter to a super-cool summer rock festival like Coachella or Bonnaroo.

    So You Think Your Kid's Ready For A Rock Festival? One Dad's Tips From The Trenches

    Great leaders are made not born

    Great leaders are made not born
    Genes have a little role to play in making future leaders and leadership development follows a specific progression via life experiences, says an interesting study....

    Great leaders are made not born

    Break-ups quite common among same-sex couples: Study

    Break-ups quite common among same-sex couples: Study
    Among couples with marriage-like commitments, same-sex couples have a similar break-up rate as heterosexual couples, according to a study....

    Break-ups quite common among same-sex couples: Study

    Class of 2014 SAT Scores Remain Stagnant

    Class of 2014 SAT Scores Remain Stagnant
    Overall, the mean score in reading was 497. It was 513 in math and 487 in writing. The top score in each category is 800, and 583 of the 1.7 million students from the class who took the test achieved the perfect score of 2,400.

    Class of 2014 SAT Scores Remain Stagnant

    Java Genes: Huge Study Identifies Genetic Influences Over How Much Coffee People Drink

    Java Genes: Huge Study Identifies Genetic Influences Over How Much Coffee People Drink
    Scientists have long known that your DNA influences how much java you consume. Now a huge study has identified some genes that may play a role.

    Java Genes: Huge Study Identifies Genetic Influences Over How Much Coffee People Drink

    Mother Who Had Baby After Womb Transplant Hopes To Inspire Others

    Mother Who Had Baby After Womb Transplant Hopes To Inspire Others
    The Swedish parents of the first baby ever born to a woman who had a womb transplant say they hope they can be an inspiration to others struggling with infertility.

    Mother Who Had Baby After Womb Transplant Hopes To Inspire Others