Bad Driving Might be Genetic

The next time you see a bad driver on the road, you could blame genetics, recent research suggests.

Neuroscientists at UC Irvine found that people with a particular gene variant performed more than 20% worse on a driving test than people without it, according to the results published on the university’s Web site. While the sample was small, a follow-up study confirmed the first results.

If the variant really does cause bad driving, it would affect almost a third of Americans. About 30% of Americans have the variant, which limits the availability of a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) during activity. BDNF keeps memory strong by supporting communication among brain cells and keeping them functioning optimally. When a person is engaged in a particular task, BDNF is secreted in the brain area connected with that activity to help the body respond, according to the research.

People with the variant “make more errors from the get-go, and they forget more of what they learned after time away,” according to Steven Cramer, neurology associate professor and senior author of the study published recently in the journal Cerebral Cortex.

Previous studies found that, in people with the variant, a smaller portion of the brain is stimulated when doing a task. The researchers wondered whether the variant could affect a common activity such as driving.

The driving test was taken by 29 people (22 without the gene variant and seven with it). They were asked to drive 15 laps on a simulator that required them to learn the nuances of a track programmed to have difficult curves and turns. Researchers recorded how well they stayed on the course over time. Four days later, the test was repeated.

Results showed that people with the variant did worse on both tests than the other participants, and they remembered less the second time. “Behavior derives from dozens and dozens of neurophysiologic events, so it’s somewhat surprising this exercise bore fruit,” Cramer said.

A test to determine whether someone has the gene variant is not commercially available, according to the research.

“I’d be curious to know the genetics of people who get into car crashes,” Cramer added. “I wonder if the accident rate is higher for drivers with the variant.”

Workers Turn to Family First for Financial Advice

New research from the Sun Life Financial Unretirement Index revealed that more working Americans seek financial advice from family members and friends than from financial advisers, the media, and online outlets.

Family was cited by 43% of Americans as their source for financial advice, while 39% said they turn to friends, according to a press release. Financial advisers ranked third with 36% of respondents naming them as a resource.

Only one-third of Americans cited online or television news as a place to get financial information, and newspapers ranked lower at 28%. The least popular choices are advertisements (11%), blogs and online forums (10%), and TV personalities (10%). The answers for these categories were consistent across all age groups, Sun Life said.

However, the Unretirement Index found dramatic differences between where younger workers and those closer to traditional retirement age turn for advice. Sixty four percent of workers ages 18 to 29 look to family members for advice, while less than 20% seek the help of a financial adviser. Conversely, workers in their 60s are more likely to seek guidance from a financial adviser (45%) than a family member (33%).

The Unretirement Index, launched by Sun Life in October 2008 (see “Sun Life Tracks ‘Unretirement’”), gauges how economic, financial, and societal forces affect working Americans, and forecasts their future retirement decisions that will impact individuals, the government, employers and the larger economy.

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