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Mind

Why becoming the right kind of optimist can transform your health

Some kinds of optimism get us into trouble, but others help us prosper. Luckily, a few tricks can help you become the right kind of positive thinker and reap the rewards

By Sumit Paul-Choudhury

1 January 2025

×îÐÂÂ鶹ÊÓƵ. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Jon Krause

It is hard to tell if a chicken is an optimist. After all, you can’t ask it if a glass of water is half full or half empty. But you can repeatedly show it a white card in front of a bowl of tasty mealworms and a black card in front of an empty bowl. Once a chick has learned to reliably choose the white card, you show it a grey card. Chicks that head immediately for this card apparently surmise that it is more white than black, and thus probably contains food – the equivalent of deeming a glass half full. On this basis, .

You can test optimism-like behaviour in many animals – and even fine-tune it. European starlings . Bottlenose dolphins . Bumblebees .

These findings might seem eccentric, but the fact that optimism, of a sort, appears in such a wide range of animals suggests that a positive outlook might be important in our own lives – and that it is deeply connected to our well-being. In recent years, these and other insights into how a glass-half-full way of thinking can affect our health have begun to help us distinguish different types of optimism. This, in turn, has allowed us to identify types that are good for us, and…

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