(Press-News.org) People's willingness to help others may be influenced by a gene that affects their level of social anxiety, according to a new study led by a University of Nebraska-Lincoln scientist. The study appears to be the first to describe this particular pathway.
Research participants who carry the dominant version of the gene were more likely to indicate anxiety about social interactions or being trapped in situations or places. The anxiety appears to inhibit their "prosocial" behavior and increase their reluctance to come to the aid of strangers.
Scott Stoltenberg, a UNL behavior geneticist and the study's lead author, said the gene -- officially known as the 5-HTTLPR triallelic genotype -- affects the amygdala, an area of the brain that is sensitive to threat.
"This particular gene makes a difference in how sensitive you are to threat," he said. "If you're looking at an ambiguous social situation, where there's someone standing there, needing help -- maybe you are more likely to interpret that as a threat, a potentially dangerous or embarrassing situation."
People with the recessive version of the gene were more likely to take social risks and to assist other people.
Stoltenberg is among UNL scientists who will go to work at the new Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior, expected to open next month. The center is intended to foster new discoveries about how the human brain works, including a high-profile study of sports-related concussions.
The social anxiety study, co-authored by Gustavo Carlo of the University of Missouri-Columbia, and Christa C. Christ, a UNL psychology graduate student, was published last month in the journal Social Neuroscience.
Building upon previous studies that showed an association between pro-social behavior and a gene that governs the serotonin neurotransmitter system, the researchers investigated whether social anxiety is part of the mechanism by which this gene influences social behavior.
"We're the first to connect the dots to find that social anxiety mediates the association between the genotype and prosocial behavior," Stoltenberg said.
The study involved 398 undergraduate students who completed a computerized survey to measure their anxiety levels and prosocial behavior. They also submitted cheek swabs for genetic testing.
In a commentary accompanying the study, Kyle G. Rather and Baldwin M. Way, scientists at Ohio State University, said Stoltenberg and his colleagues "provide significant insight into genetic influences on prosociality."
Carriers of the dominant gene were less likely to help others and more likely to construe social situations as threatening to their well being, Rather and Way wrote.
"This finding suggests that genetic variation influences the extent to which people weigh self (and genetic) preservation concerns when making decisions about whether or not to help others," they wrote.
They added that the methods the researchers use laid the groundwork for additional study of genetic pathways for other psychological traits such as empathy, compassion and moral values.
The study brings researchers closer to understanding the effect that individuals' biological makeup has on their behaviors, Carlo said. If therapists can help people relieve their social anxiety, he said, they could also become more open to prosocial behavior.
"Social people are more likely to be healthier, excel academically, experience career success and develop deeper interpersonal relationships," he said.
Both Stoltenberg and Carlo stressed, however, that the study did not find a gene that "causes" social anxiety.
"We're not talking about any sort of disease state or disorder," Stoltenberg said. There are many other genes as well as environmental factors and life experiences that influence both social anxiety and prosocial behavior, he emphasized.
In addition, many of the research participants were not socially anxious though they carried the dominant gene. He explained that the gene indicates increased probability of social anxiety, but does not cause it.
"This is not a gene for something," Stoltenberg said. "It is a gene that influences certain traits."
INFORMATION:
Writer: Leslie Reed, University Communications
UNL study: Genetic pathway links social anxiety, willingness to help others
'First to Connect the Dots'
2013-10-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Device speeds concentration step in food-pathogen detection
2013-10-15
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Researchers have developed a system that concentrates foodborne salmonella and other pathogens faster than conventional methods by using hollow thread-like fibers that filter out the cells, representing a potential new tool for speedier detection.
The machine, called a continuous cell concentration device, could make it possible to routinely analyze food or water samples to screen for pathogens within a single work shift at food processing plants.
"This approach begins to address the critical need for the food industry for detecting food pathogens ...
Study: Renewable fuel standard needs to be modified, not repealed
2013-10-15
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Congress should minimally modify – and not, as petroleum-related interests have increasingly lobbied for, repeal – the Renewable Fuel Standard, the most comprehensive renewable energy policy in the U.S., according to a new paper from two University of Illinois researchers.
In the study, U. of I. law professor Jay P. Kesan and Timothy A. Slating, a regulatory associate with the Energy Biosciences Institute, argue that RFS mandates merely ought to be adjusted to reflect current and predicted biofuel commercialization realities.
"The RFS is the first ...
Quantum conductors benefit from growth on smooth foundations
2013-10-15
WASHINGTON D.C. Oct. 11, 2013 -- Imagine if the "information superhighway" had HOV lanes so that data could be stored, processed and disseminated many times faster than possible with today's electronics. Researchers in the United States and China have teamed to develop such a speedway for future devices, an exotic type of electrical conductor called a topological insulator (TI). In a new paper in the journal AIP Advances, the international collaborators report that they grew two types of TI materials inside an ultra-high vacuum chamber on both smooth and rough surfaces ...
How a worm became a swim model
2013-10-15
VIDEO:
A precise model of the swimming patterns of the nematode C. elegans will lead to better drug screening and help researchers reverse engineer the worm's neural system.
Click here for more information.
WASHINGTON, D.C. Oct. 11, 2013 -- One might wonder why researchers would even care about the nuances of the one-millimeter long nematode worm, let alone take the time to study them. But the answer is simple: they can provide powerful insights into human health and disease.
New ...
How can researchers bridge the gap between scholarship and public administration?
2013-10-15
Los Angeles, CA (October 14, 2013) Public administrators draw on a number of different sources to inform their work including the news, blogs, podcasts, etc. But why aren't they drawing on scholarly research from published academics as a key resource and what can scholars themselves do about it? More than they might think, suggests new research.
A new article published in State and Local Government Review (a SAGE Journal) outlines how to conduct and disseminate academic research that is relevant, collaborative, and accessible to local government practitioners.
The ...
Simple blood or urine test to identify blinding disease
2013-10-15
Research led by physician-scientists at Bascom Palmer Eye Institute of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine has produced a breakthrough discovery in diagnosing retinitis pigmentosa, a blinding disease that affects about 1 in 4,000 people in the United States.
Rong Wen, M.D., Ph.D., and Byron Lam, M.D., professors of ophthalmology at Bascom Palmer, in collaboration with biochemist Ziqiang Guan, Ph.D., a research associate professor at Duke University Medical School, discovered a key marker in blood and urine that can identify people who carry genetic mutations ...
Overexpressed protein the culprit in certain thyroid cancers
2013-10-15
DALLAS – Oct. 14, 2013 – A specific protein once thought to exist only in the brain may play a crucial role in a deadly form of thyroid cancer, as well as other cancers, and provide a fresh target for researchers seeking ways to stop its progression, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers report today in Cancer Cell.
The scientists found that over-activation of a certain protein in hormone-secreting cells helps fuel medullary thyroid cancer cells in mice as well as in human cells, making the protein a potentially good target for therapies to inhibit the growth of ...
Dartmouth study shows difference in cognitive ability between low-income rural, urban children
2013-10-15
Studies have long shown a difference in cognitive ability between high- and low-income children, but for the first time, scientists have found a difference between low-income children growing up in rural areas and those growing up in urban environments.
Researchers at Dartmouth College have found that children growing up in rural poverty score significantly lower on visual working memory tests than their urban counterparts. However, children in urban poverty score slightly lower on tests of verbal working memory.
Working memory is the ability to keep information in ...
Genetic identification of a neural circuit that suppresses appetite
2013-10-15
Seattle, WA—Scientists at the University of Washington have used genetic engineering to identify a population of neurons that tell the brain to shut off appetite. Their study, "Genetic identification of a neural circuit that suppresses appetite," was published Oct. 13 in Nature.
To identify these neurons, or cells that process and transmit information in the brain, researchers first considered what makes an animal lose its appetite. There are a number of natural reasons, including infection, nausea, pain or simply having eaten too much already.
Nerves within the gut ...
Iron supplementation can provide cognitive and physical benefits to anemic children
2013-10-15
Giving daily iron supplements to anemic primary-school–aged children can have cognitive and physical benefits, according to a study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Globally, approximately 25% of school-aged children are anemic, with iron deficiency the cause of about half of all cases. Iron deficiency, which has been associated with impaired cognitive and physical development, is caused by a lack of dietary iron and, in developing countries, by parasites such as hookworm and schistosomiasis. In developed countries, newcomers, native people and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Quantum machine offers peek into “dance” of cosmic bubbles
How hungry fat cells could someday starve cancer to death
Breakthrough in childhood brain cancer research could heal treatment-resistant tumors, keep them in remission
Research discovery halts childhood brain tumor before it forms
Scientists want to throw a wrench in the gears of cancer’s growth
WSU researcher pioneers new study model with clues to anti-aging
EU awards €5 grant to 18 international researchers in critical raw materials, the “21st century's gold”
FRONTIERS launches dedicated call for early-career science journalists
Why do plants transport energy so efficiently and quickly?
AI boosts employee work experiences
Neurogenetics leader decodes trauma's imprint on the brain through groundbreaking PTSD research
High PM2.5 levels in Delhi-NCR largely independent of Punjab-Haryana crop fires
Discovery of water droplet freezing steps bridges atmospheric science, climate solutions
Positive emotions plus deep sleep equals longer-lasting perceptual memories
Self-assembling cerebral blood vessels: A breakthrough in Alzheimer’s treatment
Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings
Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs
Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values
Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change
Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections
Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level
How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition
Gene therapy may be “one shot stop” for rare bone disease
Protection for small-scale producers and the environment?
Researchers solve a fluid mechanics mystery
New grant funds first-of-its-kind gene therapy to treat aggressive brain cancer
HHS external communications pause prevents critical updates on current public health threats
New ACP guideline on migraine prevention shows no clinically important advantages for newer, expensive medications
Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures
Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age
[Press-News.org] UNL study: Genetic pathway links social anxiety, willingness to help others'First to Connect the Dots'