Observed differences in phenotypic means between groups such as parents and their offspring or male and female twins can be decomposed into genetic and environmental components. The decomposition is based on the assumption that the difference in phenotypic means is due to a difference in the location of the normal genetic and environmental distributions underlying the phenotypic individual differences. Differences between the groups in variance can be accommodated insofar as they are due to differences in unique variance or can be modeled using a scale parameter. The decomposition may be carried out in the standard analysis of genetic covariance structure using, for instance, LISREL. Illustrations are given using simulated data and twin dat...
Implicit in the application of the common-factor model as a method for decomposing trait covariance ...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
D. Soerbom's (1974, 1976) simplex model approach to simultaneous analysis of means and covariance st...
A method is introduced to test the hypothesis that both the phenotypic means and the phenotypic cova...
Martin and Eaves (Heredity 38(1):79-95, 1977) proposed a multivariate model for twin and family data...
Quantitative genetics provides a powerful framework for studying phenotypic evolution and the evolut...
The additive genetic variance-covariance matrix (G) summarizes the multivariate genetic relationship...
We considered identification of phenotype (at occasion t) to environment (at occasion t ? 1) transmi...
Implicit in the application of the common‐factor model as a method for decomposing trait covariance ...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
The object of this paper is to indicate that the Pearson-Lawley selection rules form a plausible gen...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Multivariate estimation fitting a common structure to estimates of genetic and environmental covaria...
Implicit in the application of the common-factor model as a method for decomposing trait covariance ...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
D. Soerbom's (1974, 1976) simplex model approach to simultaneous analysis of means and covariance st...
A method is introduced to test the hypothesis that both the phenotypic means and the phenotypic cova...
Martin and Eaves (Heredity 38(1):79-95, 1977) proposed a multivariate model for twin and family data...
Quantitative genetics provides a powerful framework for studying phenotypic evolution and the evolut...
The additive genetic variance-covariance matrix (G) summarizes the multivariate genetic relationship...
We considered identification of phenotype (at occasion t) to environment (at occasion t ? 1) transmi...
Implicit in the application of the common‐factor model as a method for decomposing trait covariance ...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
The object of this paper is to indicate that the Pearson-Lawley selection rules form a plausible gen...
The classical twin study is the most popular design in behavioural genetics. It has strong roots in ...
Multivariate estimation fitting a common structure to estimates of genetic and environmental covaria...
Implicit in the application of the common-factor model as a method for decomposing trait covariance ...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...
Non-genetic influences on phenotypic traits can affect our interpretation of genetic variance and th...