| Literature DB >> 19418212 |
Nicolas W Martin1, Narelle K Hansell, Mark A Wainwright, Sri N Shekar, Sarah E Medland, Timothy C Bates, Jennifer S Burt, Nicholas G Martin, Margaret J Wright.
Abstract
The Author Recognition Test (ART) measures print exposure and is a unique predictor of phonological and orthographic processes in reading. In a sample of adolescent and young adult twins and siblings (216 MZ/430 DZ pairs, 307 singletons; aged 11-29 years) ART scores were moderately heritable (67%) and correlated with reading and verbal abilities, with genes largely accounting for the covariance. We also examine whether high (and low) (i.e. 1SD above the mean) represents a quantitative extreme of the normal distribution. Heritability for high ART was of similar magnitude to the full sample, but, a specific genetic factor, independent from both low ART performance and high reading ability, accounted for 53-58% of the variance. This suggests a distinct genetic etiology for high ART ability and we speculate that the specific genetic influence is on orthographical processing, a critical factor in developing word recognition skills.Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19418212 DOI: 10.1007/s10519-009-9275-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Genet ISSN: 0001-8244 Impact factor: 2.805