TUESDAY, July 1 (HealthDay News) -- Heading to the polls on Nov.
4? If so, your genes may be driving you there, a new study
suggests.
In fact, as much as 50 percent of whether you vote or not may be
genetically determined, says a team at the University of
California, San Diego. Genes may even be more important to your
tendency to cast a ballot than family political history.
"Both nature and nurture play a role in voting," said lead
author James H. Fowler, an associate professor of political
science. "We expected genes would play a little bit of a role, but
we were surprised how strong [a] role they played."
Previously, experts primarily focused on the environmental
factors that pushed people to vote. "For a long time, they thought
that parents and children have pretty much the same behavior when
it comes to voting," Fowler said. "If they voted, it's likely you
will go to the polls as well."
But, rather than transmitting ideas, "parents are transmitting
genes," Fowler now believes.
He co-authored a report on the issue, published in July's
The Journal of Politics.
In the study, Fowler and Ph.D. candidate Christopher T. Dawes
drew on voter-turnout data in Los Angeles. They matched that data
to a registry of identical and non-identical twins.
According to that analysis, 53 percent of the variation in voter
turnout is due to differences in genes.
In fact, family upbringing appears to have little effect on how
regularly offspring participate in elections. "The other half of
the voting behavior was mostly attributable to the
unshared environment between the two twins," Fowler said.
To try to replicate the findings more broadly across the
country, Fowler and Dawes looked at nationwide voting patterns
using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which
ran from 1994 to 2002.
Using the genetic data in this study, Fowler and Dawes found
that 72 percent of differences in voter turnout among identical
twins can be accounted for by genes.
Genes also play a significant role in political participation,
including giving money to a campaign, contacting a government
official, running for office and attending political rallies, the
two researchers found.
Fowler and Dawes also looked for specific genes involved in the
decision to vote. They found that two genes that influence the
brain's serotonin system, called MAOA and 5HTT, were also
associated with a person's inclination to cast a ballot. The
serotonin system helps regulates trust and social interaction, the
experts noted.
In fact, they found that people with more efficient versions of
those genes were about 10 percent more likely to vote.
"It's not just the gene that makes you vote, but it has an
impact on how susceptible you are to different kinds of
environments," Fowler said. "Depending upon what kind of
environment you are in, it is going to activate those tendencies
you might have to cause you to participate in politics or not."
To thoroughly understand politics, one has to include genetics,
Fowler now believes.
"To study politics without genes is to miss half the story," he
said. "To really get an understanding of what people are doing and
why they are doing it, we need to integrate both nature and nurture
into the study of politics," he said.
According to John T. Jost, a professor of psychology at New York
University in New York City, this article is another in a growing
list of studies suggesting that political orientation is partly
heritable.
"In some ways, this conclusion is not so surprising, given that
we have known for over 50 years that there are basic cognitive,
motivational, and behavioral differences between leftists and
rightists," Jost said.
"Unless one believes that basic psychological characteristics
have no genetic antecedents whatsoever, one would have anticipated
these results on the basis of the psychological literature," Jost
said. "Still, it's quite important that these researchers appear to
have identified specific gene combinations that are linked to
political orientation," he said.
More information
There's more on how the brain works at Harvard's
Whole Brain Atlas.