The classical twin design uses data on the variation of and covariation between monozygotic and dizygotic twins to infer underlying genetic and environmental causes of phenotypic variation in the population. By using data from additional relative classes, such as parents, extended twin family designs more comprehensively describe the causes of phenotypic variation. This article introduces an extension of previous extended twin family models, the Cascade model, which uses information on twins as well as their siblings, spouses, parents, and children to differentiate two genetic and six environmental sources of phenotypic variation. The Cascade also relaxes assumptions regarding mating and cultural transmission that existed in previous extend...
Recent developments in the collection and modeling of intensive longitudinal data have enabled us to...
Classical twin and family designs can be applied to examine the contribution of genetic and environm...
Twin registries form an exceptionally rich source of information that is largely unexploited for phe...
The extended twin kinship design allows the simultaneous testing of additive and nonadditive genetic...
a = additive genetic effects; i = non-additive genetic effects due to epistasis; e = non-shared envi...
Modeling the data from extended twin pedigrees allows the estimation of increasing complex covarianc...
The classical twin design (CTD) uses observed covariances from monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs ...
During the last fifty years more than 2700 twin studies have been published, examining the etiology ...
<p>Notes: A = additive genetic effects, D = genetic dominance, E = non-shared environmental effects,...
The ''Virginia 30,000'' comprise 29,698 subjects from the extended kinships of 5670 twin pairs. Over...
The power to detect sources of genetic and environmental variance varies with sample size, study des...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Recent reports using a classical behavior genetic research design in which twin data are combined wi...
Twins have long been of interest for illuminating genetic and environmental influences on human trai...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Recent developments in the collection and modeling of intensive longitudinal data have enabled us to...
Classical twin and family designs can be applied to examine the contribution of genetic and environm...
Twin registries form an exceptionally rich source of information that is largely unexploited for phe...
The extended twin kinship design allows the simultaneous testing of additive and nonadditive genetic...
a = additive genetic effects; i = non-additive genetic effects due to epistasis; e = non-shared envi...
Modeling the data from extended twin pedigrees allows the estimation of increasing complex covarianc...
The classical twin design (CTD) uses observed covariances from monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs ...
During the last fifty years more than 2700 twin studies have been published, examining the etiology ...
<p>Notes: A = additive genetic effects, D = genetic dominance, E = non-shared environmental effects,...
The ''Virginia 30,000'' comprise 29,698 subjects from the extended kinships of 5670 twin pairs. Over...
The power to detect sources of genetic and environmental variance varies with sample size, study des...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Recent reports using a classical behavior genetic research design in which twin data are combined wi...
Twins have long been of interest for illuminating genetic and environmental influences on human trai...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Recent developments in the collection and modeling of intensive longitudinal data have enabled us to...
Classical twin and family designs can be applied to examine the contribution of genetic and environm...
Twin registries form an exceptionally rich source of information that is largely unexploited for phe...