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Here’s the reason why you like to gossip, and why it’s OK

New research has unveiled some of the reasons why men and women gossip and suggests that the activity is actually good for us.

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Sat, November 25, 2017

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Here’s the reason why you like to gossip, and why it’s OK Through gossiping members of the opposite sex have an opportunity to show off their desirable characteristics to each other, also known as intrasexual competition. (Shutterstock/File)

New research has unveiled some of the reasons why men and women gossip and suggests that the activity is actually good for us.

Adam Davis of the University of Ottawa in Canada, who carried out the research, suggests that gossiping is actually a highly evolved social skill, rather than a character flaw.

Through gossiping members of the opposite sex have an opportunity to show off their desirable characteristics to each other, also known as intrasexual competition.

Davis’s new study is now the first to provide verifiable evidence for a positive link between intrasexual competitiveness, the amount of gossip that people take part in, and whether they believe it is OK to gossip.

Researchers recruited at 290 heterosexual students between the ages of 17 and 30 years old and asked them to complete three questionnaires.

One questionnaire measured how competitive the participants are towards other members of their own sex, especially if they see them as a potential competitor for a mate.

The other two questionnaires measured how likely people were to talk about others and if they think gossiping is acceptable.

Read also: Three simple exercises you can do with a friend

Why and how we do it

The results showed that those who were more competitive towards other members of their own sex were more likely to gossip, and more likely to think that gossiping about someone behind their back was OK.

The team also found that women were more likely to gossip than men, enjoyed it more, and saw more social value in participating in the activity, which would allow them to gain more information about possible competitors when finding a mate.

Women were also more likely to gossip about others’ physical appearance and share social information, whereas men were more likely to gossip about the achievements of others.

Rethinking the activity

“The findings demonstrate that gossip is intimately linked to mate competition and not solely the product of a female gender stereotype that may be viewed as pejorative,” states Davis.

Davis believes that therapists, counsellors, educators, and the general public should rethink their stance about gossip.

“It is a highly evolved social skill essential for interpersonal relationships, rather than a flaw of character.”

The findings can be found published online in Evolutionary Psychological Science.

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