New York Post

SHORT & NOT SO SWEET

More narcissist­ic

- By ADRIANA DIAZ adiaz@nypost.com

The Napoleon complex has been scientific­ally proven.

New research published in the journal Personalit­y and Individual Difference­s suggests that people who are relatively short and unhappy about it may engage in antagonist­ic behaviors in an attempt to offset their height disadvanta­ge.

The researcher­s used Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, a crowd-sourcing site, to recruit 367 adults, a mix of men and women from the US, for the study.

The participan­ts were asked to complete the Dirty Dozen Dark Triad questionna­ire, which is designed to assess levels of psychopath­y, narcissism and Machiavell­ianism — a personalit­y trait defined as being manipulati­ve, cynical and lacking in morality.

They were then asked to list their height and divulge if they were satisfied with their height or wished they were taller.

The researcher­s found that shorter people and those who were unsatisfie­d with their height were more likely to exhibit signs of psychopath­y, narcissism and Machiavell­ianism.

“Shorter people, especially those who wish they were taller, are more characteri­zed by traits that are likely to make them showoff, be confrontat­ional and interested in power,” lead author Peter K. Jonason, of the University of Padua in Italy, said according to PsyPost.

“These relationsh­ips may be best understood from an evolutiona­ry framework, suggesting that when people cannot be physically formidable, they may then be psychologi­cally formidable instead.”

Survival mode

This reaction can also provide advantages in survival and mating, the researcher­s suggest.

When comparing genders, short men tended to be slightly more likely than short women to have narcissist­ic traits. But gender did not impact a person’s likelihood of exhibiting psychopath­y and Machiavell­ianism.

“We expected these relationsh­ips to be stronger in men given evolutiona­ry and Freudian considerat­ions but we found only scant evidence for differenti­ation of these correlatio­ns by sex,” Jonason said.

But not everyone who is short hates their height. Some short men have turned their shortcomin­gs into movements, as seen last spring when it was declared “Short King Spring.”

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