Putting my experiences of Life In NYC in a more personal perspective, and checking in with international/national, tech and some other news
Translation from English
Saturday, October 12, 2013
A happy Marriage Can Depend on Our Genes? And Then What?
I love these speculative science stories..
They are always scratching the surface of so many topics...it's interesting to read about but not very definitive
from CBS News
By
Michelle Castillo /
CBS News/ October 11, 2013, 12:02 PM
Happy marriage may depend on your genes
A Chinese couple pose for wedding photos in front of a merry-go-round outside a shopping mall in Tianjin on Oct. 8, 2013. /MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images
Are some couples destined to be
happier in their relationships than others? A new study says our genes
may play a role in marital bliss.
A UC Berkley and Northwestern
University study found that people who have a certain gene variant,
known as the HTTLPR allele, were more likely either to be extremely
happy or extremely miserable in their relationships.
"An enduring
mystery is, what makes one spouse so attuned to the emotional climate
in a marriage, and another so oblivious?" study author Robert W.
Levenson, a UC Berkeley psychologist, said in a press release.
"With these new genetic findings, we now understand much more about
what determines just how important emotions are for different people."
The
researchers looked at 156 married middle-aged and older couples that
were together for more than 20 years. Every five years, the couples were
asked to come in and report on their current marital satisfaction. They
were observed interacting with each other in a lab setting, where
researches judged their interactions though their facial expressions,
body language, tone of voice and topic of discussion. Then, 125 of the
participants were asked to provide DNA samples.
The researchers discovered that an allele known as 5-HTTLPR,
which is inherited from each parent and either comes in short or long
lengths, could influence how people view their marriage.
People
who had one or two long alleles were less likely to be annoyed by
different emotional changes in their relationship. On the contrary,
those who had two short 5-HTTLPR alleles were more likely to be very
upset when there was a lot of strife in their relationship and elated
when times were good. This doesn't mean that people with different
allele lengths are incompatible. Rather, it means that those with short
alleles are more sensitive to the emotional climate of their
relationship.
Only 17 percent of the couples had two short
5-HTTLPR alleles. The researchers saw that there was a strong
correlation between the emotional tone of their conversations and how
they said they felt about their relationships. For the couples with long
or alleles of varying length, the emotional aspect of their talks had
little to no connection to how satisfied they were in their marriage.
"Neither of these genetic variants is inherently good or bad," lead
author Claudia M. Haase, assistant professor of human development and
social policy at Northwestern University, said in a press release.
"Each
has its advantages and disadvantages."
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