Literature DB >> 6872627

The Texas Adoption Project: adopted children and their intellectual resemblance to biological and adoptive parents.

J M Horn.   

Abstract

Intelligence test scores were obtained from parents and children in 300 adoptive families and compared with similar measures available for the biological mothers of the same adopted children. Results supported the hypothesis that genetic variability is an important influence in the development of individual differences for intelligence. The most salient finding was that adopted children resemble their biological mothers more than they resemble the adoptive parents who reared them from birth. A small subset of the oldest adopted children did not resemble their biological mothers. The suggestion that the influence of genes declines with age is treated with caution since other adoption studies report a trend in the opposite direction.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6872627

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  4 in total

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Review 2.  The paradox of intelligence: Heritability and malleability coexist in hidden gene-environment interplay.

Authors:  Bruno Sauce; Louis D Matzel
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  2017-10-30       Impact factor: 17.737

3.  Pre-placement risk and longitudinal cognitive development for children adopted from foster care.

Authors:  Jill M Waterman; Erum Nadeem; Emilie Paczkowski; Jared Cory Foster; Justin A Lavner; Thomas Belin; Jeanne Miranda
Journal:  Child Welfare       Date:  2013

4.  Using adopted individuals to partition indirect maternal genetic effects into prenatal and postnatal effects on offspring phenotypes.

Authors:  Liang-Dar Hwang; Gunn-Helen Moen; David M Evans
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 8.713

  4 in total

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