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Monday, June 22, 2015

Genetic link has been found between mental illness and creativity

Mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder may share some genetic roots with creativity, new research suggests.
After looking at genetic data taken from more than 150,000 people, researchers have found that those in artistic and creative careers are more likely to carry genes that predispose them to a risk of mental illness than non-creative professionals. But the study, which is published in Nature Neuroscience, has been met with plenty of healthy scepticism, not least of all due to the researchers’ definition of ‘creativity’.
This isn’t the first time that a genetic link between mental illness and creativity has been suggested. Historically, many of society’s most brilliant minds also struggled with mental issues, helping to enforce the stereotype of the ‘tortured artist’, and arange of studies over the years has also helped to support the link. However, genetic evidence has been pretty patchy up until now.
In the new research, a team of scientists from biopharmaceutical company deCODE genetics in Iceland looked at data taken from 86,000 Icelandic people. 
http://www.sciencealert.com/
They found that individuals who worked in an artistic profession or who belonged to a national artistic society were 17 percent more likely to carry genetic variants linked to bipolar disorder or schizophrenia than other members of the public. 
The team then replicated their research with data taken from people in the Netherlands and Sweden, and found that, in this subset, creatives were nearly 25 percent more likely to carry the mental disorder genes than their non-creative peers.
“This could not be accounted for by increased relatedness between creative individuals and those with psychoses, indicating that creativity and psychosis share genetic roots,” the authors write in Nature Neuroscience.
But critics of the study now question whether we can really classify someone as creative simply by their profession, and whether the genetic links found are all that significant, as Arielle Duhaime-Ross writes for The Verge:
“But here’s the thing: the increase in risk can be kind of misleading. Together, the variants used the study only explain about 6 percent of schizophrenia and 1 percent of bipolar disorder, according to a graph in the study. And these same variants only explain about one-quarter of 1 percent of artistic ability.”
In other words, the genes that predict risk of mental illness might help make people a tiny bit more creative, but something else - whether genes or environmental factors - must be involved to get them the rest of the way.
"There is a link, and it is astonishingly weak in the sense that most people would care about,” population geneticist David Culter from Emory University in the US, who wasn’t involved in the study, told Duhaime-Ross.
However, CEO of deCODE Kari Stefansson hopes that the results will help put mental illness in a positive light for once.
“To be creative, you have to think differently,” Stefansson told Ian Sample over at the Guardian. “And when we are different, we have a tendency to be labelled strange, crazy and even insane.”

64 ARTS OF LIFE ...

64 ARTS OF LIFE ....ANCIENT BHARATA WAS SO REFINED BEFORE BARBARIANS DESECRATED IT and maintained Highest levels of Learning of ARTS .
Chatuh sasti kala: (Sanskrit) "Sixty-four arts."
They are as follows:
(1) Geet vidya—art of singing.
(2) Vadya vidya—art of playing on musical instruments.
(3) Nritya vidya—art of dancing.
(4) Natya vidya—art of theatricals.
(5) alekhya vidya—art of painting.
(6) viseshakacchedya vidya—art of painting the face and body with color
(7) tandula-kusuma-bali-vikara—art of preparing offerings from rice and flowers.
(8) pushpastarana—art of making a covering of flowers for a bed.
(9) dasana-vasananga-raga—art of applying preparations for cleansing the teeth, cloths and painting the body.
(10) mani-bhumika-karma—art of making the groundwork of jewels.
(11) sayya-racana—art of covering the bed.
(12) udaka-vadya—art of playing on music in water.
(13) udaka-ghata—art of splashing with water.
(14) citra-yoga—art of practically applying an admixture of colors.
(15) malya-grathana-vikalpa—art of designing a preparation of wreaths.
(16) sekharapida-yojana—art of practically setting the coronet on the head.
(17) nepathya-yoga—art of practically dressing in the tiring room.
(18) karnapatra-bhanga—art of decorating the tragus of the ear.
(19) sugandha-yukti—art of practical application of aromatics.
(20) bhushana-yojana—art of applying or setting ornaments.
(21) aindra-jala—art of juggling.
(22) kaucumara—a kind of art.
(23) hasta-laghava—art of sleight of hand.
(24) citra-sakapupa-bhakshya-vikara-kriya—art of preparing varieties of delicious food.
(25) panaka-rasa-ragasava-yojana—art of practically preparing palatable drinks and tinging draughts with red color.
(26) suci-vaya-karma—art of needleworks and weaving.
(27) sutra-krida—art of playing with thread.
(28) vina-damuraka-vadya—art of playing on lute and small drum.
(29) prahelika—art of making and solving riddles.
(30) durvacaka-yoga—art of practicing language difficult to be answered by others.
(31) pustaka-vacana—art of reciting books.
(32) natikakhyayika-darsana—art of enacting short plays and anecdotes.
(33) kavya-samasya-purana—art of solving enigmatic verses.
(34) pattika-vetra-bana-vikalpa—art of designing preparation of shield, cane and arrows.
(35) tarku-karma—art of spinning by spindle.
(36) takshana—art of carpentry.
(37) vastu-vidya—art of engineering.
(38) raupya-ratna-pariksha—art of testing silver and jewels.
(39) dhatu-vada—art of metallurgy.
(40) mani-raga jnana—art of tinging jewels.
(41) akara jnana—art of mineralogy.
(42) vrikshayur-veda-yoga—art of practicing medicine or medical treatment, by herbs.
(43) mesha-kukkuta-lavaka-yuddha-vidhi—art of knowing the mode of fighting of lambs, cocks and birds.
(44) suka-sarika-prapalana (pralapana)? -- art of maintaining or knowing conversation between male and female cockatoos.
(45) utsadana—art of healing or cleaning a person with perfumes.
(46) kesa-marjana-kausala—art of combing hair.
(47) akshara-mushtika-kathana—art of talking with letters and fingers.
(48) mlecchita-kutarka-vikalpa—art of fabricating barbarous or foreign sophistry.
(49) desa-bhasha-jnana—art of knowing provincial dialects.
(50) nirmiti-jnana—art of knowing prediction by heavenly voice
(51) yantra-matrika—art of mechanics.
(52) dharana-matrika—art of the use of amulets.
(53) samvacya—art of conversation.
(54) manasi kavya-kriya—art of composing verse mentally.
(55) kriya-vikalpa—art of designing a literary work or a medical remedy.
(56) chalitaka-yoga—art of practicing as a builder of shrines called after him.
(57) abhidhana-kosha-cchando-jnana—art of the use of lexicography and meters.
(58) vastra-gopana—art of concealment of cloths.
(59) dyuta-visesha—art of knowing specific gambling.
(60) akarsha-krida—art of playing with dice or magnet.
(61) balaka-kridanaka—art of using children's toys.
(62) vainayiki vidya—art of enforcing discipline.
(63) vaijayiki vidya—art of gaining victory.
(64) vaitaliki vidya—art of awakening master with music at dawn.

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