| Literature DB >> 21347359 |
Bonnie Wing-Yin Chow1, Connie Suk-Han Ho, Simpson Wai-Lap Wong, Mary M Y Waye, Dorothy V M Bishop.
Abstract
This study investigated the etiology of individual differences in Chinese language and reading skills in 312 typically developing Chinese twin pairs aged from 3 to 11 years (228 pairs of monozygotic twins and 84 pairs of dizygotic twins; 166 male pairs and 146 female pairs). Children were individually given tasks of Chinese word reading, receptive vocabulary, phonological memory, tone awareness, syllable and rhyme awareness, rapid automatized naming, morphological awareness and orthographic skills, and Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices. All analyses controlled for the effects of age. There were moderate to substantial genetic influences on word reading, tone awareness, phonological memory, morphological awareness and rapid automatized naming (estimates ranged from .42 to .73), while shared environment exerted moderate to strong effects on receptive vocabulary, syllable and rhyme awareness and orthographic skills (estimates ranged from .35 to .63). Results were largely unchanged when scores were adjusted for nonverbal reasoning as well as age. Findings of this study are mostly similar to those found for English, a language with very different characteristics, and suggest the universality of genetic and environmental influences across languages.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21347359 PMCID: PMC3037369 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0016640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Age distribution of the participants.
| Frequency (Twin pairs) | Percent (%) | |
|
| ||
| 3–4 | 17 | 5.45 |
| 4–5 | 57 | 18.27 |
| 5–6 | 58 | 18.59 |
| 6–7 | 43 | 13.78 |
| 7–8 | 47 | 15.06 |
| 8–9 | 49 | 15.71 |
| 9–10 | 21 | 6.73 |
| 10–11 | 20 | 6.41 |
| Total | 312 | 100.00 |
|
| ||
| Boy | 166 | 53.21 |
| Girl | 146 | 46.79 |
| Total | 312 | 100.00 |
|
| ||
| MZ | 228 | 73.08 |
| DZ | 84 | 26.92 |
| Total | 312 | 100.00 |
Figure 1Constructed items illustrating the left-right reversal and the lexical decision tasks.
Intraclass correlations by zygosity, genetic model parameter estimates, and nested model statistics of each variable controlling for age.
| Intraclass Correlations | ACE Models | Nested Models | ||||||
| Variable | MZ | DZ | a2 | c2 | e2 | Best model |
|
|
| Word reading | .90 | .54 | .73(.54,.92) | .18(−.02,.38) | .09(.08,.11) | AE | 1.31 | .25 |
| Receptive vocabulary | .68 | .62 | .11(−.06,.29) | .57(.38,.75) | .32(.28,.36) | CE | 0.87 | .35 |
| Phonological memory | .75 | .51 | .50(.28,.71) | .25(.03,.46) | .26(.22,.29) | ACE | – | – |
| Tone awareness | .55 | .29 | .52(.23,.82) | .02(−.26,.29) | .46(.40,.52) | AE | 0.01 | .93 |
| Syllable and rhyme awareness | .71 | .67 | .08(−.08,.23) | .63(.47,.80) | .29(.25,.33) | CE | 0.48 | .49 |
| Rapid automatized naming | .58 | .37 | .42(.15,.70) | .15(−.11,.41) | .43(.37,.48) | AE | 0.60 | .44 |
| Morphological awareness | .64 | .42 | .44(.19, .69) | .20(−.04,.44) | .36(.31,.41) | AE | 1.20 | .27 |
| Orthographic skills | .55 | .45 | .20(−.05,.45) | .35(.11,.58) | .45(.40,.51) | CE | 1.36 | .24 |
Note. Number of twin pairs ranged from 210 to 228 for MZ and from 80 to 84 for DZ. All ACE models had a satisfactory goodness of fit indicated by a nonsignificant χchange between the saturated and the ACE models (Δχ ranged from 0.73 to 7.25, Δdf = 6, ps>.05). MZ = Monozygotic twins; DZ = Dizygotic twins; a2 = additive genetic variance; c2 = shared environment variance; e2 = nonshared environment variance; Δχ and Δdf are the differences between the ACE and the nested models.
(95% confidence intervals in parentheses).
Intraclass correlations by zygosity, genetic model parameter estimates, and nested model statistics of each variable controlling for age and nonverbal reasoning.
| Intraclass Correlations | ACE Models | Nested Models | ||||||
| Variable | MZ | DZ | a2 | c2 | e2 | Best model |
|
|
| Word reading | .85 | .52 | .68(.48, .89) | .17(−.04, .38) | .15(.13, .17) | AE | 1.15 | .28 |
| Receptive vocabulary | .54 | .50 | .09(−.15, .32) | .45(.23, .68) | .46(.40, .52) | CE | 0.27 | .60 |
| Phonological memory | .71 | .46 | .51(.28, .75) | .20(−.03, .43) | .29(.25, .33) | AE | 1.25 | .27 |
| Tone awareness | .51 | .22 | .49(.40, .59) | .00(.00, .00) | .51(.44, .57) | AE | 0.00 | 1.00 |
| Syllable and rhyme awareness | .57 | .53 | .07(−.15, .30) | .50(.28, .71) | .43(.37, .49) | CE | 0.23 | .63 |
| Rapid automatized naming | .58 | .37 | .42(.15, .70) | .15(−.11, .41) | .43(.37, .49) | AE | 0.58 | .45 |
| Morphological awareness | .48 | .36 | .25(−.03, .53) | .23(−.03, .49) | .52(.45, .59) | AE | 1.30 | .25 |
| CE | 1.72 | .19 | ||||||
| Orthographic skills | .45 | .43 | .06(−.21, .32) | .40(.15, .64) | .55(.47, .62) | CE | 0.09 | .76 |
Note. Number of twin pairs ranged from 210 to 227 for MZ and from 80 to 84 for DZ. All ACE models had a satisfactory goodness of fit indicated by a nonsignificant χchange between the saturated and the ACE models (Δχ ranged from 0.81 to 6.77, Δdf = 6, ps>.05). MZ = Monozygotic twins; DZ = Dizygotic twins; a2 = additive genetic variance; c2 = shared environment variance; e2 = nonshared environment variance; Δχ and Δdf are the differences between the ACE and the nested models.
(95% confidence intervals in parentheses).
A comparison of heritability estimates of language and reading skills in past twin studies and the present Chinese twin study.
| Past twin study | Chinese | |||
| Skills | Authors | Country | Heritability estimate | Heritability estimate |
| Word reading | Byrne et al., 2005a | Australia, USA | .70 | .73/.68CA |
| Byrne et al., 2007a | Australia, USA | .49 to .72 | ||
| Byrne et al., 2009a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .82 | ||
| Samuelsson et al., 2007a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .61 to .91 | ||
| Samuelsson et al., 2008a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .33 to .84 | ||
| Brooks et al., 1990b | USA | .45CA | ||
| Gayàn & Olson, 2003b | USA | .85CA | ||
| Keenan et al., 2006b | USA | .66.65CA | ||
| Hart, Petrill, Thompson, & Plomin, 2009c | USA | .45 to .94 | ||
| Petrill et al., 2006c | USA | .68.67CA | ||
| Harlaar, Dale, & Plomin, 2005d | UK | .63 to .74 | ||
| Vocabulary | Byrne et al., 2002a | Australia, USA, Norway | .18 | .11/.09CA |
| Byrne et al., 2009a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .44 | ||
| Samuelsson et al., 2005a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .32 | ||
| Hart, Petrill, DeThorne, et al., 2009c | USA | .29 to .49 | ||
| Mather & Black, 1984e | USA | .68 | ||
| Van Hulle et al., 2004 | USA | .08 to .20 | ||
| Dionne et al., 2003d | UK | .10 to .21 | ||
| Phonological memory | Byrne et al., 2002a | Australia, USA, Norway | .19 | .50/.51CA |
| Samuelsson et al., 2005a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .57 | ||
| Wadsworth et al., 1995b | USA | .95 | ||
| Kovas, Hayiou-Thomas, et al., 2005d | UK | .41 | ||
| Phonological awareness | Byrne et al., 2002a | Australia, USA, Norway | .52 | .08/.07CA |
| Byrne et al., 2005a | Australia USA | .63 | ||
| Samuelsson et al., 2005a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .60 | ||
| Gayàn & Olson, 2003b | USA | .83CA | ||
| Petrill et al., 2006c | USA | .48.30CA | ||
| Petrill et al., 2007c | USA | .14 to .59 | ||
| Hohnen & Stevenson, 1999 | UK | .52 to .62 | ||
| Kovas, Hayiou-Thomas, et al., 2005d | UK | .38 | ||
| Rapid Automatized Naming | Byrne et al., 2002a | Australia, USA, Norway | .00 to .66 | .42/.42CA |
| Byrne et al., 2005a | Australia, USA | .60 | ||
| Samuelsson et al., 2005a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .64 | ||
| Davis et al., 2001 | USA | .62 | ||
| Hart, Petrill, Thompson, & Plomin, 2009c | USA | .42 to .79 | ||
| Petrill et al., 2006c | USA | .77.72CA | ||
| Morphology/Grammar | Byrne et al., 2002a | Australia, USA, Norway | .31 | .44/.25CA |
| Samuelsson et al., 2005a | Australia, USA, Scandinavia | .29 | ||
| Orthographic skills | Gayàn & Olson, 2003b | USA | .87CA | .20/.06CA |
Note. Studies with typically-developing samples in the age range of 3 to 11 years are included in this table. Studies based on the same sample are denoted by the same superscript in the Authors column. In case of studies examined the same variable based on the same sample, the study with the largest sample in the analyses is included. Superscript CA denotes estimates with general cognitive ability accounted for. References for this table are given in Text S1.