Everyone has an entertainer we like to follow and like, but when will such people be more? Is there a possibility of getting absorbed in unknown people? Unfortunately, according to the article entitled "Cognitive profile of individuals who tend to worship celebrities," celebrity worship is social interaction that individuals are obsessed with more than one celebrity. This obsession is like an emotional paranoia that individuals think that others love them. A group of psychologists want to determine whether obsession / worship for these celebrities have common features to individuals. They did a few tests: celebrity attitude scale, strong personal attitude, and six cognitive means. At the end of these tests, they discovered that people with higher cognitive abilities are more realistic than those with lower function.
Psychologists who carried out this study have done a very good job of randomizing the tests to minimize the possibility of systemic order effects. At the same time, these groups get enough division of labor and will use different methods to reach the conclusion. The test sample size was 102, but this group was not selected by random selection. The organization itself is not evenly distributed but 81 men and only 21 women are included. I really do not understand how it came to the conclusion that declining cognitive function is a common feature of early worshipers. This sentence is too general to me, it is targeted for a lot of people, not all of which show obsessive behavior
The research was done in a good way, but if they increase their selection group (not just a particular group of students) and balance them on sex, they will get more accurate results I believe.
According to the evidence, the low spiritual health is related to the worship of famous people. Researchers studied the relationship between celebrity worship and mental health in British adult samples. In one study evidence was found that the dimension of strong personal celebrity worship is associated with high levels of depression and anxiety. Similarly, in another 2004 survey, the strong personal celebrity worship aspect relates not only to higher levels of depression and anxiety but also to higher levels of stress, adverse effects, and disease reporting I understood that. Neither study has any evidence that there is a significant relationship between celebrity worship and mental health's entertainment or marginal pathological aspects.
Houran is a co-creator of the Celebrity Worship Scale, which measures the level of personal concern for celebrities. "Celebrity worship begins with normal healthy behavior," he said. "But there is the possibility of converting it to a more dysfunctional expression," he says that people are leading to celebrities who do not exist. Houran, in a study announced in February 2002 with other British and American researchers, discovered that one third of Americans suffered some form of "celebrity worship syndrome". In the most harmless form, this situation appears as emptiness. However, the survey entered obsessive thinking and discovered that it sometimes worsens behavior as much as tracking. This is caused by delusions. Four
Many researches have been done on who is involved in the worship of celebrities and factors that encourage compulsion. Celebrity worship for purely fun purpose is likely to reflect outgoing personality, which is likely to be a healthy past time for most people. The worship of this celebrity accompanies harmless actions like reading and learning celebrities. However, a strong personal attitude towards celebrities reflects neurosis characteristics. The most extreme explanation of celebrity worship shows the characteristics of morbidity behavior and psychosis. Such celebrity worship may be accompanied by sympathy for celebrity's failure and success, obsession with gays' details of life, and excessive perception of celebrities.