Both hormones are known to make us nicer people, especially within close relationships. Oxytocin, often labelled the "love drug", promotes maternal behaviour and greater sociability, Prof Poulin says.
The study, an extension on previous findings, wanted to establish if the hormones incite other heightened social behaviours, like giving to charity and giving blood. Researchers surveyed 711 people on their attitudes towards civic duty and collected saliva samples for DNA analysis to see what form of oxytocin and vasopressin they had.
"These genes combined with people's perceptions of the world as a more or less threatening place to predict generosity," Prof Poulin says.
"So if one of your neighbours seems really generous, caring, civic-minded kind of person, while another seems more selfish, tight-fisted and not as interested in pitching in, their DNA may help explain why one of them is nicer than the other."
Prof Poulin doesn't go as far as to say he has found the "niceness gene", but one that "makes a contribution" to feelings people have about the world around them.
- HERALD ONLINE