Bad temper makes you more productive!
New Canadian study indicated that feeling bad mood can help some people really focus and better manage their time and prioritization of tasks better.
The researchers found that good mood and time management skills hampered traditional skills, as results showed that this only applies to extroverts, whereas introverts stop working when they feel depressed.
The study examined by Tara McCauley, a Professor of psychology at the University of Waterloo, Martin Gable, doctoral candidate, in how to carry 95 people for daily demands and pressures depending on their mood.
The researchers focused on emotional interaction, like sensitivity and duration and intensity of your emotional responses associated with mood, these are things the determinants that affect what is called the "effective functioning" (or the ability to perform tasks).
The researchers divided the participants in this study into two categories of emotional interaction, to people with high interaction and others with low interaction.
The study found that most people have emotional responses interaction fast and intense and persistent, while persons with low interaction or antisocial, are more relaxed.
The best performance came in the conventional functions extroverts when they were in a bad mood.
In contrast, frugal adverse interaction showed that their desire to work back down to stop when they are in a bad mood.
McCully warned that "results should not be interpreted that it's good to lose his temper, or to overreact to react, or to be sulking."
There is a need for more research and studies to explain this relationship. However, there are studies that indicate that people who possess a high interaction are more accustomed to experiencing negative emotions.
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