Why do some people immediately burst into laughter after a
humorous moment, while others can barely crack a smile? New research examining
emotional reactivity suggests one of the answers may lie in a person’s DNA.
In a new study linking a gene to positive emotional
expressions such as smiling and laughing, researchers demonstrated that people
with a certain genetic variant — those with short alleles of the gene 5-HTTLPR
— smiled or laughed more while watching cartoons or subtly amusing film clips
than people with long alleles.
Previous research has linked the gene to negative emotions;
the study provides the strongest evidence to date that the same gene is also
linked to positive emotional expressions.
The research will be published online June 1 in the American
Psychological Association journal Emotion.
Claudia M. Haase of Northwestern University and Ursula
Beermann of the University of Geneva co-authored the study, which was conducted
in the laboratories of Dacher Keltner and Robert W. Levenson at the University
of California, Berkeley.
In the study, the scientists looked at short and long
alleles of the gene 5-HTTLPR, which is involved in the regulation of serotonin,
a neurotransmitter implicated in depression and anxiety.
An allele is a variant of a gene. Each gene has two alleles;
humans inherit one allele from mom and one from dad.
Early research suggested that the short alleles predicted
unwanted or negative outcomes, such as depression, anxiety and substance abuse.
People with short alleles were found to have higher negative emotions than
those with long alleles.

But the latest study adds to the growing body of evidence
suggesting that people with short alleles also may be more sensitive to the
emotional highs of life.
“Having the short allele is not bad or risky,” said Haase,
an assistant professor in the Human Development and Social Policy program at
Northwestern’s School of Education and Social Policy. “Instead, the short
allele amplifies emotional reactions to both good and bad environments.”
“Our study provides a more complete picture of the emotional
life of people with the short allele,” Haase added. “People with short alleles
may flourish in a positive environment and suffer in a negative one, while
people with long alleles are less sensitive to environmental conditions.”
“The fundamental truth of genes is that they don’t have the
final say,” said senior author Levenson, a leading researcher in human emotions
and professor in the department of psychology at UC-Berkeley. “There’s always
an interaction between nature and nurture that shapes outcomes, and this study
is another example of that.”
The latest study combined three experiments from different
Berkeley labs. In the first experiment, young adults were shown cartoons from
“The Far Side” by Gary Larson and The New Yorker. In the second experiment,
young, middle-aged and older adults watched a subtly amusing clip from the film
“Strangers in Paradise.” The final experiment asked middle-aged and older
spouses to discuss an area of disagreement in their marriage.
Source: sciencedaily.com
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