By Rick Nauert PhD Senior News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D.on June 27, 2011
Intriguing new research investigates the influence of genetics and the environment on a person’s set-point — the baseline emotional state that sets the mind’s level of contentment or unease.
Researchers have known that while everyone struggles through life’s ups and downs, we tend to drift back to a “set point” and that this level is typically stable for depression and anxiety.
The overwhelming view within psychiatry and psychology is that the baseline is due to genetic factors, said Virginia Commonwealth University psychiatrist Kenneth S. Kendler. “Yet we know that extreme environmental adversities, such as abuse in childhood or wartime trauma, have a long-term impact on people,” he said.
This observation led Kendler to study how environmental experiences also influence the set points for anxiety and depression.
His new study, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, concludes that they do.
Kendler and an international roster of collaborators discovered that life experiences play a central role in establishing the set points for anxiety and depression, perhaps even more than genes do.
Kendler used a group of research subjects time-honored for testing the effects of nature and nurture: identical twins, whose genes are the same, but whose life stories diverge, showing the effects of environmental factors on a developing person.
In a global study, researchers developed nine data sets from longitudinal twin studies—a total of more than 12,000 twins, including 4,235 pairs and 3,678 unpaired twins, from three continents.
The twins had all completed reports of their own symptoms of anxiety and depression; three times in eight of the studies, twice in the ninth. Each study covered five or six years. The youngest subjects were just under 11, the oldest almost 67.
Researchers followed participants from pre-pubescence to early adulthood, middle age to retirement age.
They discovered the set points of the 10-year-old pairs were the same or closely similar. As the twins moved through adolescence and adulthood, however, those points diverged increasingly, until the differences leveled out at around age 60.
The set points were stable—they didn’t wander all over the place—though not permanent; they weren’t necessarily the same for 50 years.
But in examining the difference between those points in pairs of genetically identical people, the researchers saw that while genes may play a part in determining our emotional predilections, it is life that shows our moods the place they want to settle.
The study has implications beyond anxiety and depression, says Kendler.
“Environmental experiences have a memory and stay with us. What governs the emotional set point of adults is a mixture of genetic factors and the total aggregate of environmental experiences.”
The moral of the story? “If you want to be happy in old age, live a good life.”
Source: Association for Psychological Science
Related News Articles
-->Related Clinical Articles
-->
Anxiety, Children and Teens, Depression, General, Genetics, Health-related, LifeHelper, Mental Health and Wellness, Personality, Professional, Psychology, Psychotherapy, Research, Stress -->
« News Index
DepressionDepression Overview Depression Quiz Blog: Depression on My Mind General Symptoms of DepressionSpecific Symptoms of a Depressive EpisodeTreatment OptionsLiving with Depression Depression LibraryDozens of articles Ask the Therapist about DepressionAsk Others about Depression Medications for DepressionMore on AntidepressantsNew Depression Medications on the Horizon Depression in Older AdultsDepression in ChildrenTeenager DepressionDepression in WomenDiabetes and DepressionMore articles on depression... Related DisordersDythymic DisorderDysthymia TreatmentSeasonal Affective Disorder Related TopicsNIMH ResearchMEDLINE ResearchTreatment News Clinical TrialsDiagnostic Codes Recommended ResourcesBooksWebsites & OrganizationsEvidence-based Treatment for Children Connect with OthersPersonal StoriesJoin Our Support GroupRate 'n Review Depression MedicationsOther Online Support GroupsLatest ArticlesIntimate Relationships As a Vehicle for GrowthMyths About Suicide4 Facts About Teen Depression and How Parents Can HelpCoping with the Grief of a Stillborn: An Interview with Ann FaisonNew Pilot Program Tries to Help the Mentally Ill Quit SmokingWhat to Do When You Think Someone is Suicidal
Just Published...Do You Have a Positive Social Support System?The Illusion of ConfidenceAnxiety, Fire and Radioactive WasteBreaking Bad Food Habits
What's HotLady Gaga's Born This Way Music Video and Her Triumph Over Shame
Find a Therapist
Users Online: 3451
Join Us Now!
Local GuidesAll Guides
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
DC
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Privacy Policy Terms of Use Site Map Disclaimer/Disclosure Feeds
Site last updated: 29 Jun 2011 Psych Central Professional
Psych Central Answers
Psych Central Blog Network
Psych Central News
Tests & Quizzes
Sanity Score
Forums NeuroTalk
ADHD
Anxiety
Bipolar
Depression
Schizophrenia
Psychotherapy
with the
HONcode
standard:
Verify here
0 comments:
Post a Comment