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Journal ArticleDOI

A Longitudinal Twin Study of Personality and Major Depression in Women

TLDR
In women, the relationship between neuroticism and the liability to major depression is substantial and largely the result of genetic factors that predispose to both neuroticismand major depression.
Abstract
Objective: To elucidate the nature of the etiologic relationship between personality and major depression in women. Design: A longitudinal twin design in which twins completed a time 1 questionnaire and, 15 months later, were personally interviewed for the occurrence of major depression during the last year and completed a time 2 questionnaire. Both questionnaires contained short forms assessing neuroticism and extraversion. Participants: 1733 twins from female-female pairs ascertained from the population-based Virginia Twin Registry. Results: Extraversion was unrelated to lifetime or 1-year prevalence of major depression. Neuroticism was strongly related to lifetime prevalence of major depression and robustly predicted the prospective 1-year prevalence of major depression in those who, at time 1, denied previous depressive episodes. However, controlling for levels of neuroticism at time 1, levels of neuroticism at time 2 were moderately elevated in those who had had an episode of major depression between times 1 and 2 ("scar" effect) and substantially elevated in those experiencing an episode of major depression at time 2 ("state" effect). In those who developed major depression, levels of neuroticism did not predict time to onset. In the best-fit longitudinal twin model, the proportion of the observed correlation between neuroticism and the liability to major depression that is due to shared genetic risk factors was estimated at around 70%, that due to shared environmental risk factors at around 20%, and that due to a direct causal effect of major depression on neuroticism (via both "scar" and "state" effects) at around 10%. Approximately 55% of the genetic liability of major depression appeared to be shared with neuroticism, while 45% was unique to major depression. Conclusion: In women, the relationship between neuroticism and the liability to major depression is substantial and largely the result of genetic factors that predispose to both neuroticism and major depression.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Structure of Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors for Common Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorders in Men and Women

TL;DR: The underlying structure of the genetic and environmental risk factors for the common psychiatric and drug abuse disorders in men and women is very similar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comorbidity of anxiety and unipolar mood disorders

TL;DR: Research on relationships between anxiety and depression has proceeded at a rapid pace since the 1980s, with data converging on an integrative hierarchical model of mood and anxiety disorders in which each individual syndrome contains both a common and a unique component.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does low self-esteem predict depression and anxiety? A meta-analysis of longitudinal studies.

TL;DR: If future research supports the hypothesized causality of the vulnerability effect of low self- esteem on depression, interventions aimed at increasing self-esteem might be useful in reducing the risk of depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Public health significance of neuroticism.

TL;DR: There is growing evidence that neuroticism is a psychological trait of profound public health significance, a robust correlate and predictor of many different mental and physical disorders, comorbidity among them, and the frequency of mental and general health service use.
Journal ArticleDOI

Etiologic connections among substance dependence, antisocial behavior, and personality: Modeling the externalizing spectrum

TL;DR: A hierarchical biometric model is presented of the origins of comorbidity among substance dependence, antisocial behavior, and a disinhibited personality style, and it is offered as a novel target for future research to reconcile evidence for general and specific causal factors within the externalizing spectrum.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Coefficient of agreement for nominal Scales

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a procedure for having two or more judges independently categorize a sample of units and determine the degree, significance, and significance of the units. But they do not discuss the extent to which these judgments are reproducible, i.e., reliable.
Book ChapterDOI

Factor Analysis and AIC

Hirotugu Akaike
- 01 Sep 1987 - 
TL;DR: The information criterion AIC was introduced to extend the method of maximum likelihood to the multimodel situation by relating the successful experience of the order determination of an autoregressive model to the determination of the number of factors in the maximum likelihood factor analysis as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A revised version of the Psychoticism scale.

TL;DR: In view of certain psychometric deficiencies of the original psychoticism scale, an attempt was made to improve the scale by adding new items as discussed by the authors, which was attempted to increase the internal reliability of the scale, improve the shape of the distribution and increase the mean and variance score.
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