4.7 Article

Why are children in the same family so different from one another?*

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
卷 40, 期 3, 页码 563-582

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyq148

关键词

behavior genetics; development; environment; heredity; individual differences; intelligence; personality; psychopathology; schizophrenia; twins

资金

  1. John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
  2. National Science Foundation [BNS-8505692, BNS-8200310]
  3. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [HD-10333, HD-18426]
  4. Medical Research Council [G9817803B] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

One of the most important findings that has emerged from human behavioral genetics involves the environment rather than heredity, providing the best available evidence for the importance of environmental influences on personality, psychopathology, and cognition. The research also converges on the remarkable conclusion that these environmental influences make two children in the same family as different from one another as are pairs of children selected randomly from the population. The theme of the target article is that environmental differences between children in the same family (called nonshared environment) represent the major source of environmental variance for personality, psychopathology, and cognitive abilities. One example of the evidence that supports this conclusion involves correlations for pairs of adopted children reared in the same family from early in life. Because these children share family environment but not heredity, their correlation directly estimates the importance of shared family environment. For most psychological characteristics, correlations for adoptive siblings hover near zero, which implies that the relevant environmental influences are not shared by children in the same family. Although it has been thought that cognitive abilities represent an exception to this rule, recent data suggest that environmental variance that affects IQ is also of the nonshared variety after adolescence. The article has three goals: (1) To describe quantitative genetic methods and research that lead to the conclusion that nonshared environment is responsible for most environmental variation relevant to psychological development, (2) to discuss specific nonshared environmental influences that have been studied to date, and (3) to consider relationships between nonshared environmental influences and behavioral differences between children in the same family. The reason for presenting this article in BBS is to draw attention to the far-reaching implications of finding that psychologically relevant environmental influences make children in a family different from, not similar to, one another.

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