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This is How You Get Down and Dirty with Indian Street-Food in America

With Chole Bhature, Khasta Kachodis, Dahi Bhallas, and Mango Lassi.

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Annual Westchester Kennel Club Dog Show: Is It Over Already?!

Media_httpcdnsvcsc2uc_gioic

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Big Head, Bad Health: What's New About Narcissism

vain man in suit looking at himself in glass

The personality trait narcissism may have an especially negative effect on the health of men, according to a new study.

“Narcissistic men may be paying a high price in terms of their physical health, in addition to the psychological cost to their relationships,” said Sara Konrath, a University of Michigan psychologist who co-authored the study published in PLoS ONE.

Earlier studies by Konrath and others have shown that the level of narcissism is rising in American culture, and that narcissism tends to be more prevalent among males. The personality trait is characterized by an inflated sense of self-importance, overestimations of uniqueness, and a sense of grandiosity.

Take a Narcissistic personality self-test

For the new study, Konrath and colleagues David Reinhard of the University of Virginia, and William Lopez and Heather Cameron of the University of Michigan examined the role of narcissism and sex on cortisol levels in a sample of 106 undergraduate students. Cortisol, which can be measured through saliva samples, is a widely used marker of physiological stress.

The researchers measured cortisol levels at two points in time in order to assess baseline levels of the hormone, which signals the level of activation of the body’s key stress response system, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Participants were not asked to complete any tasks that would elevate their stress. Elevated levels of cortisol in a relatively stress-free situation would indicate chronic HPA activation, which has significant health implications, increasing the risk of cardiovascular problems.

To assess participants’ narcissism, the researchers administered a 40-item narcissism questionnaire that measures five different components of the personality trait. Two of these components are more maladaptive, or unhealthy—exploitativeness and entitlement; and the other three are more adaptive, or healthy—leadership/authority, superiority/arrogance, and self-absorption/self-admiration.

“Even though narcissists have grandiose self-perceptions, they also have fragile views of themselves, and often resort to defensive strategies like aggression when their sense of superiority is threatened,” Reinhard said. “These kinds of coping strategies are linked with increased cardiovascular reactivity to stress and higher blood pressure, so it makes sense that higher levels of maladaptive narcissism would contribute to highly reactive stress response systems and chronically elevated levels of stress.”

Reinhard, Konrath and colleagues found that the most toxic aspects of narcissism were indeed associated with higher cortisol in male participants, but not in females. In fact, unhealthy narcissism was more than twice as large a predictor of cortisol in males as in females.

They also found that there was no relationship between healthy narcissism and cortisol in either males or females.

“These findings extend previous research by showing that narcissism may not only influence how people respond to stressful events, but may also affect how they respond to their regular day-to-day routines and interactions,” Konrath said. “Our findings suggest that the HPA axis may be chronically activated in males high in unhealthy narcissism, even without an explicit stressor.”

Why should narcissism affect males differently? “Given societal definitions of masculinity that overlap with narcissism—for example, the belief that men should be arrogant and dominant—men who endorse stereotypically male sex roles and who are also high in narcissism may feel especially stressed,” Konrath said.

In future research, she hopes to examine why narcissism is not as physiologically taxing for women as it is for men, and also to examine the potential links between maladaptive narcissism and other physiological responses related to stress and poor coping, including inflammatory markers such as C-Reactive Protein.

Konrath is an assistant research professor at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR) and is also affiliated with the University of Rochester Medical Center.

Narcissism

 

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On This Day: February 16

Updated February 15, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Feb. 16, 1923, the burial chamber of King Tutankhamen’s recently unearthed tomb was unsealed in Egypt.

Go to article »

On Feb. 16, 1893, Katharine Cornell, the American stage actress who was called “the first lady of the American theater”, was born. Following her death on June 9, 1974, her obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1804 Lt. Stephen Decatur led a successful raid into Tripoli harbor to burn the U.S. Navy frigate Philadelphia, which had fallen into the hands of pirates.
1862 Some 14,000 Confederate soldiers surrendered at Fort Donelson, Tenn., to Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.
1868 The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks was organized in New York City.
1918 Lithuania proclaimed its independence.
1923 The burial chamber of King Tutankhamen’s recently unearthed tomb was unsealed in Egypt.
1937 Wallace H. Carothers, a research chemist for Du Pont, received a patent for nylon.
1945 American troops landed on the island of Corregidor in the Philippines during World War II.
1948 NBC-TV aired the first nightly newscast, “The Camel Newsreel Theatre,” which consisted of Fox Movietone newsreels.
1968 The nation’s first 911 emergency telephone system was inaugurated in Haleyville, Ala.
2005 The Kyoto global warming pact, which the U.S. never ratified, went into effect.
2005 The NHL canceled what was left of its season after a round of last-gasp negotiations failed to resolve differences over a salary cap – the issue that led to a lockout.
2009 A 200-pound chimpanzee severely mauled its owner’s friend before being shot dead by police in Stamford, Conn.
2011 Bookstore chain Borders filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Ice-T, Actor, rapper (“Law and Order: Special Victims Unit”)

Actor-rapper Ice-T (“Law and Order: Special Victims Unit”) turns 54 years old today.

AP Photo/Jessica Rinaldi

Elizabeth Olsen, Actress (“Martha Marcy May Marlene”)

Actress Elizabeth Olsen (“Martha Marcy May Marlene”) turns 23 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

1918 Patty Andrews, Singer (The Andrews Sisters), turns 94
1952 James Ingram, R&B singer, turns 60
1957 LeVar Burton, Actor, turns 55
1959 John McEnroe, Tennis Hall of Famer, turns 53
1961 Andy Taylor, Rock musician (Duran Duran), turns 51
1971 Sarah Clarke, Actress (“Twilight,” “24”), turns 41
1972 Jerome Bettis, Football player, turns 40

 

Historic Birthdays

Katharine Cornell 2/16/1893 – 6/9/1974 American stage actress.Go to obituary »
68 Frederick William 2/16/1620 – 5/9/1688
Elector of Brandenburg (1640-88)
73 Giambattista Bodoni 2/16/1740 – 11/29/1813
Italian printer who designed several typefaces
63 Henry Wilson 2/16/1812 – 11/22/1875
Vice President of the United States (1873-75)
64 Nikolay Semyonovich Leskov 2/16/1831 – 3/5/1895
Russian novelist and short-story writer
80 Henry Adams 2/16/1838 – 3/27/1918
American historian and author
89 Henry Martyn Leland 2/16/1843 – 3/26/1932
American engineer and manufacturer
85 Wilhelm Schmidt 2/16/1868 – 2/10/1954
German anthropologist and Roman Catholic priest
67 Robert Flaherty 2/16/1884 – 7/23/1951
American explorer and filmmaker
75 Edgar Bergen 2/16/1903 – 9/30/1978
American ventriloquist and comedian

 

 

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310/365/01

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