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That neutralizes the benefit that they might otherwise receive from their toughness," Judge said.
For their research, Judge and his colleagues pulled data of about 3,500 people from three large American studies: the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth, the National Survey of Midlife Development and the Wisconsin Longitudinal Survey.
The researchers controlled for factors such as education and job complexity that could skew the results.
In all the studies, people who scored high in disagreeableness were found to have earned more than agreeable types.
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People who scored high in disagreeableness were found to have earned more.
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