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Home | Technology | IQ is the #1 Judgment Made From e-mails in the US

IQ is the #1 Judgment Made From e-mails in the US

Philadelphia, PA (Gawkwire.com) Over half of adults in America judge people's intelligence based on e-mail content and format, according to research released today by GMX, www.gmx.com, the free e-mail service for more than 11 million active users. The survey of 1,002 US adults1 who use e-mail for both work and personal reasons on a regular basis1 found that communication through e-mail plays a significant role in how Americans perceive and judge others both personally and professionally. Of those surveyed, 58 percent of Americans admitted they judge intelligence based on the writing style, tone and language used in e-mail. Along those same lines, 57 percent of users are concerned about having an influence on how others view their own intelligence. In fact, adults who worry the most about this perception intentially adapt to a particular language, writing style or tone of voice in their e-mails to peers, family or coworkers.

The results found in the 2009 GMX E-mail Psychology Study suggest how essential e-mail is in the US for learning about others and developing a sense of personality and intellect. In fact, after intelligence, the next characteristics most often judged through e-mail were age and authority. About a third of users (33 percent) said they may try to guess a person's age just based on the language, tone and style of e-mails, while 28 percent assume how much of an authority figure a person is amongst their peers. Moreover, 23 percent said they will judge how successful a person might be in a lifetime along with 20 percent of users who interpret social status through electronic communication.

Eva Heil, Managing Director, GMX, said, "E-mail has truly changed how people interact and has evolved into a highly valued means of communication. Most people now make social judgments based on the e-mails they receive and care about their own e-mail identity, which means that an individual's approach to their e-mail has never been so important."

Words alone are enough for some Americans to interpret a person's attractiveness and sense of fashion, as suggested by the study's data. Juding only from what is written in e-mails, 11 percent of Americans decide how sexually attractive someone is and 8 percent make a judgment about fashion sense.

Heil added, "What people write is not necessarily taken at face value anymore. People are starting to form opinions based on the language, tone and style used in e-mail."

When it came to perceptions about their own image, people seemed most concerned about their intelligence (57 percent). Judgments about how calm, happy and authoritative they are also took top priority with 31 percent, 28 percent and 25 percent, respectively. Surprisingly though, perceptions about age were only top concerns for 14 percent of US adults, while 9 percent worried about sexual attractiveness and 6 percent with being seen as fashionable.

Based on results from the recent GMX survey, e-mail is becoming an acceptable medium for sharing sensitive and important information. Over half of US adult users surveyed (60 percent) felt e-mail was appropriate for getting asked out on a date as well as for telling major 'life decisions' to family and friends. Doing so with incorrect grammar and shorthand was acceptable to 59 percent.

With over 11 million active users, GMX offers a reliable, secure e-mail service coupled with great looks, great performance and state-of-the-art functionality. Free e-mail has grown up, find it at GMX. The free e-mail service can be seen at www.gmx.com.




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Frank Feingold Frank Feingold is the resident IT guy for Ping! Zine and staff IT Editor. When he is not busy saving the servers from evil hackers, he can be found running his own shared hosting company Doreo.com. In his spare time he enjoys spending time with his family and shopping for new vehicles.]