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Six Personality Traits Psychologists Say Lead To A Longer Life
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Being conscientious and extroverted seemed to help. There isn’t an exact formula for a longer life yet, though researchers think they have some pretty good ideas. Great genes, enough sleep, and a decent diet can go a long way if you want to reach 100, for instance. But some factors are less physical. For instance, one paper found that people who had a positive view of ageing may be less likely to experience age-related decline. And having a sense of purpose “appears to widely buffer against mortality risk across the adult years,” a 2015 paper found. Yet another paper, this time looking at data from 22,000 participants, found that “personality nuances were associated with mortality risk ”. This self-descriptor was most linked to a longer life in the 2025 paper (27% lower mortality risk). Study author and psychologist Professor René Mõttus told The Guardian: “The word ‘active’ was the most striking. “Participants who described themselves this way were significantly less likely to die during the study period – with a 21% lower risk, even when age, gender and medical conditions were taken into account.” The trait, tied in this study to outgoingness, seemed to be another helpful self-description (12% lower risk) for those hoping to live longer. “The extraversion items active and lively were related to a lower mortality risk,” the paper reads. Separate 2017 research linked higher levels of extraversion to a 14% reduction in mortality. The study also found that higher levels of conscientiousness, including describing yourself as organised, were linked to a longer life (14% lower mortality risk). “Being ‘organised’ might help people stick to routines that improve health, but it may also reflect underlying psychological resilience or social habits that contribute to a longer life,” study author Professor Páraic O’Súilleabháin told The Guardian. It’s not the only paper to link greater conscientiousness to a longer life, either. Linked to a 12% lower risk of death in this paper, the term also falls in the “conscientiousness” bracket. Those who saw themselves as industrious had a 15% lower risk of mortality, as did those who described themselves as “thorough”. One 2016 paper found that those who worked even a year later than retirement age saw an up-to-11% lower risk of death in an 18-year follow-up period. This personality trait, which fell into the broader category of “agreeableness”, has also been linked to a longer lifespan. Another paper found that people who volunteered tended to live longer.