Our level of happiness throughout life
is strongly influenced by the genes with which we were
born, say experts.
An Edinburgh University study of identical
and non-identical twins suggests genes may control half
the personality traits keeping us happy.
The other half is linked to lifestyle,
career and relationships.
However, another expert said despite
the research in the journal Psychological Science, we
can still train ourselves to be more content.
Psychologists have developed several
methods to assess a person's personality type - and even
their level of happiness.
The Edinburgh study, in conjunction with
researchers at the Institute for Medical Research in Queensland,
Australia, looked at results from 900 pairs of twins.
The idea behind twin studies is that,
because identical twins are genetically exactly the same,
while fraternal twins are not, it is possible, by comparing
the results from the two groups to calculate how strongly
influenced a particular trait is by genetics.
In this case, the researchers looked
for people who tended not to worry, and who were sociable
and conscientious.
All three of these separate characteristics
have been linked by other research to an overall sense
of happiness or well-being.
The differences between the results from
the identical and fraternal twins suggested that these
traits were influenced up to 50% by genetic factors.
Positive psychology
Dr Alexander Weiss, from Edinburgh's
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences,
who led the research, said: "Together with life and liberty,
the pursuit of happiness is a core human desire.
"Although happiness is subject to a wide
range of external influences we have found there is a
heritable component of happiness which can be entirely
explained by genetic architecture of personality."
The science of happiness is a growing
field, with demand from both the public and industry for
insights into emotional wellbeing.
The Centre for Applied Positive Psychology
promotes research into techniques for boosting personal
contentment.
Dr Alex Linley, from the centre, said
that even though other studies supported the genetic argument,
it was wrong for anyone to think that nature had dealt
them a fixed hand in happiness terms.
He said: "What it means is that, rather
than a single point, people have a range of possible levels
of happiness - and it is perfectly possible to influence
this with techniques that are empirically proven to work.
"Simple things, like listing your strengths
and using them in new ways every day, or keeping a journal
where you write down, every night, three things that you
are grateful for, have been shown to deliver improvements."