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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The heritability of depressive symptoms: multiple informants and multiple measures
Richard J. RoseJaakko KaprioJaap Van Der MeereRichard J. VikenLea PulkkinenMinna Happonensubject
Malesex differencesMultivariate analysisCHILDHOODCHILDRENDevelopmental psychology0302 clinical medicineTwins DizygoticDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyANXIETYAdditive genetic effectsLongitudinal StudiesChildFinlandLikelihood Functionseducation.field_of_study05 social sciencesPSYCHOPATHOLOGYtwinsPsychiatry and Mental healthmultivariate analysisADOLESCENCEdepressionAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyBEHAVIOR050104 developmental & child psychologyPsychopathologyDISORDERSeducationPopulationTWINContext (language use)03 medical and health sciencesSex FactorsAGEGENETIC-ANALYSISDiseases in TwinsmedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to Disease0501 psychology and cognitive scienceseducationModels GeneticSocial environmentTwins MonozygoticHeritabilityPediatrics Perinatology and Child Health030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Background: Earlier research suggests large rater differences in heritability estimates of children's depressive symptoms in the context of significant age and sex-limitation effects. Methods: With data from an ongoing, population-based twin-family study, we estimated genetic and environmental influences on children's depression with models allowing for sex-specific effects. Our assessments of twins included self-reports and ratings made by their classmate peers, their parents and their teachers, allowing estimates of genetic and environmental effects with data from different informants. Model-fitting used maximum likelihood estimation of log-transformed data from a sample of 1,366 11- and 12-year-old twin pairs. Results: Estimates of additive genetic effects were significant for both boys and girls across all four informants, and, standardized to reflect the percentage of phenotypic variance accounted for, those estimates ranged from .28 to .71. Significant effects from common environmental sources were found in ratings of teachers and parents, where, typically, one individual rated both co-twins, but neither in peer nominations nor self-ratings. The correlation of teacher and parent ratings was modest, and bivariate model-fitting found no correlation in either genetic or shared environmental effects between teacher and parental ratings. At this young age, sex-limitation effects were found only in teacher ratings, where genetic effects were greater in girls than in boys. Conclusions: Results underscore the utility of using multiple informants to measure children's behavior and provide a foundation for follow-up of these twins in later adolescence.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2002-05-01 | Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry |