Study Sheds Light on What Makes People Shy

Highly sensitive individuals show greater brain activation in visual attention areas of the brain when making judgments of subtle changes in scenes.
(Image credit: Stony Brook University)

The brains of shy or introverted individuals might actually process the world differently than their more extroverted counterparts, a new study suggests.

About 20 percent of people are born with a personality trait called sensory perception sensitivity (SPS) that can manifest itself as the tendency to be inhibited, or even neuroticism. The trait can be seen in some children who are "slow to warm up" in a situation but eventually join in, need little punishment, cry easily, ask unusual questions or have especially deep thoughts, the study researchers say.

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