A new study suggests that nostalgia can be considered very clichie by some people, but people are better to deal with its health and well -being.
Those who are indifferent are more close friends and make more efforts to maintain friendship and relationships than those who are less emotional, the researchers said in the journal Comment and feeling,
“People who feel more often indifferent and give importance to those memories are more aware of their important relationships and need to be nourished,” Kuan-Ju Huang said in a news release, as quoted by a news release. UPI.
Huang said, “This means that these friendship may be more likely, even when we grow up and change our lives, interests and responsibilities,” said Huang.
Researchers in background notes stated that social networks play an important role in a person’s good and provide psychological and cognitive benefits in old age.
Researchers said the results come from three experiments associated with more than 1,500 people in the US and Europe.
The first experiment was held on 450 undergraduate students at Buffalo University in New York. Participants were surveyed about their apathy and level of their friendly circles.
Those who said that they were indifferent also said that they gave more efforts and importance to maintain their friendship. He also had very close friendships and relationships.
Second study saw to find the effect of this apathy among the pools of over 400 American adults.
Those whose average age was 40 was surveyed and the participants who were found to work more in maintaining friendship were the closest friendship.
The third experiment used data from a long -running Dutch Social Science Survey to examine the impact of apathy on social networks over a period of seven years.
The results showed that people become more indifferent as soon as they grow up.
For non-Notalgic people, low level people had 18% less close relationships by the end of seven years.
“There is evidence that young adults report indifferent feelings compared to middle -aged adults, while the older adults dramatically report high levels of apathy,” Huang said.
Huang said that young and big adults are different due to high levels of apathy.
“Life infection during emerging adulthood can trigger a psychological need in apathy, including life transition, leaving the family home and entering college or workforce,” said Huang.
“Young adults may remember about their high school years or family moments, when they face challenges during infection in adulthood,” they continued. “For older adults, apathy is more likely to be associated with a limited future disadvantages and experiences about emotions.”