| Literature DB >> 25539975 |
Robert M Kirkpatrick1, Matt McGue, William G Iacono.
Abstract
The present study of general cognitive ability attempts to replicate and extend previous investigations of a biometric moderator, family-of-origin socioeconomic status (SES), in a sample of 2,494 pairs of adolescent twins, non-twin biological siblings, and adoptive siblings assessed with individually administered IQ tests. We hypothesized that SES would covary positively with additive-genetic variance and negatively with shared-environmental variance. Important potential confounds unaddressed in some past studies, such as twin-specific effects, assortative mating, and differential heritability by trait level, were found to be negligible. In our main analysis, we compared models by their sample-size corrected AIC, and base our statistical inference on model-averaged point estimates and standard errors. Additive-genetic variance increased with SES-an effect that was statistically significant and robust to model specification. We found no evidence that SES moderated shared-environmental influence. We attempt to explain the inconsistent replication record of these effects, and provide suggestions for future research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25539975 PMCID: PMC4374354 DOI: 10.1007/s10519-014-9698-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Genet ISSN: 0001-8244 Impact factor: 2.805