Dishing dirt behind someone's back is a
beneficial activity, say scientists. Spreading gossip—defined as
alerting others that a person has behaved badly—helps maintain social
order and even lowers the stress of the gossiper, according to a new
study out of UC Berkeley and reported by the San Francisco Chronicle.
Researchers set up experiments involving people cheating at games.
Observers who witnessed the cheating experienced a spike in their heart
rates, but when they sent "gossip notes" to others about the cheating,
their heart rates dropped.
"We tend
to think of gossip as a bad thing and it gets a bad reputation, but if
you were to remove it, that would be at the cost of social order," says
the study's co-author. "Much of what we call gossip is driven by a
sincere desire to help others. Gossip can make you feel better. You
might even say it's therapeutic."
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