BACKGROUND: Social cognitive skills are those which enable understanding of social situations; they are relevant to a variety of psychiatric disorders including autism, schizophrenia and externalizing behaviour problems in children. AIMS: To examine the heritability of social cognitive skills. METHOD: Using a population-based sample of twins aged 5-17, the genetic and environmental influences on social cognitive skills were examined. RESULTS: Male scores were higher than female scores (P < 0.001), indicating poorer social cognition among males. A heritability of 0.68 (95% CI 0.43-0.78) was found, with shared environmental influences accounting for only 0.05 of the variance (95% CI 0.00-0.28). This could be removed from the model without worsening the fit. There were no significant differences in genetic effects between the genders, but age-related changes were found, with younger twins showing greater genetic influence on social cognition. CONCLUSIONS: Social cognition appears to be under considerable genetic influence in the population and shows significant male-female differences. No gender differences in genetic influences on the variance of scores were found, but the effects of age were significant.
BACKGROUND:Social cognitive skills are those which enable understanding of social situations; they are relevant to a variety of psychiatric disorders including autism, schizophrenia and externalizing behaviour problems in children. AIMS: To examine the heritability of social cognitive skills. METHOD: Using a population-based sample of twins aged 5-17, the genetic and environmental influences on social cognitive skills were examined. RESULTS: Male scores were higher than female scores (P < 0.001), indicating poorer social cognition among males. A heritability of 0.68 (95% CI 0.43-0.78) was found, with shared environmental influences accounting for only 0.05 of the variance (95% CI 0.00-0.28). This could be removed from the model without worsening the fit. There were no significant differences in genetic effects between the genders, but age-related changes were found, with younger twins showing greater genetic influence on social cognition. CONCLUSIONS:Social cognition appears to be under considerable genetic influence in the population and shows significant male-female differences. No gender differences in genetic influences on the variance of scores were found, but the effects of age were significant.
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Authors: Frances S Chen; Robert Kumsta; Bernadette von Dawans; Mikhail Monakhov; Richard P Ebstein; Markus Heinrichs Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2011-11-28 Impact factor: 11.205
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