Some people tend to get depressed because their brains are biologically tuned to be better at perceiving and focusing on negative information in the environment.

Living in a hostile environment is particularly bad for these people. Interestingly, there is some evidence that living in a supportive environment is particularly *good* for these people.

Many "risk" genes for mental illness may be more accurately described as genes which make people sensitive to the environment, for better or worse.

@muninn Source?

@dredmorbius

In part, see Vulnerability genes or plasticity genes? J Belsky et al. Molecular Psychiatry. 2009 Aug; 14(8): 746–754. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2834322/

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Vulnerability genes or plasticity genes?

The classic diathesis–stress framework, which views some individuals as particularly vulnerable to adversity, informs virtually all psychiatric research on behavior–gene–environment (G × E) interaction. An alternative framework ...