The Free Press Journal

Pursuit of happiness is linked to specific brain areas

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Have you ever pondered upon the little things that actually make you happy? Is it sleeping late on a Saturday night without worrying about waking up early the next day? Is it going on a shopping spree, splurging all your money or is it simply sitting down to a delicious homemade meal after a long day at work?

The answer is always subjective i.e. one person’s favourite sandwich is another person’s love for playing with babies. However, according to a Japanese study, happiness runs far deeper than commonplac­e culinary joys – In fact, it boils down to neuroscien­ce and the size of a particular region in the brain.

A team of university professors in Japan examined the links between brain structure and happiness and found that happier people had a larger volume of grey matter in the precuneus, an area in the brain sandwiched between the two cerebral hemisphere­s that studies have linked to memory retrieval.

The researcher­s analysed structural MRI scans and compared these results with participan­ts’ responses to the Japanese version of the Subjective Happiness Scale (SHS), which measures happiness levels via a four-item questionna­ire.

They asked questions intended to rate their personal levels of happiness on a seven-point scale and has been used globally in psychiatry since its advent in 1999.

They found that those who scored highly on the scale typically also benefited from this unique neurologic­al structurin­g, quoted the Independen­t.

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