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'Bad news' stresses women more

by The Canadian Press - Story: 81674
Oct 10, 2012 / 7:34 pm

It's said that no news is good news. But what's the effect of bad news presented by the media?

For women, exposure to negative news stories may make them more reactive to subsequent stressful situations, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal PLoS One, which did not see a similar response in men.

Researchers also found that women had a better recollection of information learned from those so-called bad news stories.

"Nowadays, we are constantly bombarded with news in the newspaper, the radio, on the TV. And now with Facebook and online press and Twitter, you are constantly bombarded with information," said lead author Marie-France Marin, a PhD candidate in neuroscience at the University of Montreal.

"It's difficult to avoid the news, considering the multitude of news sources out there.

"And what if all that news was bad for us? It certainly looks like that could be the case."

To conduct the study, researchers recruited 56 subjects, aged 18 to 35, and divided them into four groups, two for each gender. Each group was given several recent articles to read from two Montreal daily newspapers.

One group of men and a group of women read emotionally neutral news stories, about subjects such as the opening of a new park or the premiere of a film. The other two gender-segregated groups read "bad news" stories, which described such events as murders or traffic accidents.

Saliva samples were taken from each participant and their levels of the stress hormone cortisol were measured within minutes of having read the stories.

"When our brain perceives a threatening situation, our bodies begin to produce stress hormones that enter the brain and may modulate memories of stressful or negative events," explained senior author Sonia Lupien, director of the Centre for Studies on Human Stress.

"This led us to believe that reading a negative news story should provoke the reader's stress reaction."

The researchers found that cortisol levels were pretty much stable in all groups right after reading the articles, no matter the subject matter.

But that wasn't the case after participants were faced with back-to-back stressful tasks, a mock job interview followed by mental arithmetic, within half an hour of the news-reading session.

Researchers found that women exposed to negative news were more reactive to the subsequent stressor, as shown by elevated cortisol levels, compared with men who read bad news stories and males and females given neutral articles.

When all participants were given memory recall tests the next day, Marin said women who read negative news stories were better able to recall the details of the articles. "It is interesting to note that we did not observe this phenomenon amongst the male participants."

The differences between how men and women react when confronted with negative news may be evolutionary, say the researchers. Scientists have speculated that an emphasis on the survival of offspring may have influenced the development of the female stress system, leading women to be more empathetic.

"The other thing is women have a tendency to ruminate more than men," said Marin, theorizing that turning an experience over and over in one's mind might store it more effectively in the brain's memory banks.

"This could explain why women have higher (levels of) memory after."

The Canadian Press
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