Narcissistic people do not make pleasant colleagues, but they perform better than average at tasks that would daunt others, according to new US research.
鈥淣arcissists will leave everyone else to do the drudgery and come in at the end to take all the credit, or show up when there鈥檚 some opportunity to be admired,鈥 says Roy Baumeister of Case Western Reserve University, Ohio, who led the research.
鈥淏ut if you need someone to make a crucial presentation or to do something spectacular, they could be good to have around,鈥 he adds.
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The study is the first to find that narcissistic people perform better on tasks that give them the opportunity for glory, Baumeister says.
In the mirror
The team studied 248 people, who completed questionnaires assessing the degree to which they agreed with statements such as: I am an extraordinary person, I like to look at myself in the mirror, the world would be a better place if I ruled it.
They then took part in four tests: the children鈥檚 board game Operation (a test of manual skill), darts, and measures of arithmetic and creativity.
People who scored higher on the narcissism measure performed on average about 20 per cent better on the tests when they were given the chance to shine, says Baumeister.
鈥淔or example, we鈥檇 have an audience present or not present. Or we鈥檇 tell them that to do well, they鈥檇 have to outperform 95 per cent of other people, or only 50 per cent. Being better than average isn鈥檛 much incentive to a narcissist, but 95 per cent was something they could really shoot for,鈥 he says.
Noxious self esteem
When given a high or public target to aim for, the more narcissistic people also performed better than those with lower narcissism scores.
But the trait is poorly understood, Baumeister says: 鈥淲e are at a fairly early stage of finding out about these people and what makes them tick.鈥
Most people have a degree of narcissism, but at its extreme it is characterised by a 鈥渘oxious sense of self esteem,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut why people grow up to be narcissists is a really important question and we do not have enough data on that.鈥
Baumeister presented his research at the annual conference of the British Psychological Society in Blackpool.