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Cumulative-genetic plasticity, parenting and adolescent self-regulation

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TLDR
The more plasticity alleles males (but not females) carried, the more and less self-regulation they manifested under, respectively, supportive and unsupportive parenting conditions.
Abstract
Background: The capacity to control or regulate one’s emotions, cognitions and behavior is central to competent functioning, with limitations in these abilities associated with developmental problems. Parenting appears to influence such self-regulation. Here the differential-susceptibility hypothesis is tested that the more putative ‘plasticity alleles’ adolescents carry, the more positively and negatively influenced they will be by, respectively, supportive and unsupportive parenting. Methods: One thousand, five hundred and eighty-six (1586) adolescents (n = 754 males; n = 832 females) enrolled in the American Add Health project were scored in terms of how many of 5 putative ‘plasticity alleles’ they carried – the 10R allele of DAT1, the A1 allele of DRD2, the 7R allele of DRD4, the short allele of 5HTTLPR, and the 2R/3R alleles of MAOA. Then the effect of the resultant index (ranging from 0 to 5) of cumulative-genetic plasticity in moderating effects of parenting on adolescent self-regulation was evaluated. Results: Consistent with differential susceptibility, the more plasticity alleles males (but not females) carried, the more and less self-regulation they manifested under, respectively, supportive and unsupportive parenting conditions. Conclusion: Adolescent males appear to vary for genetic reasons in their susceptibility to parenting vis-a`-vis self-regulation, perhaps due to epistatic and/or epigenetic processes. G·E research may benefit from compositing candidate genes. To afford comparative evaluation of differential-susceptibility vs. diathesis-stress models of environmental action, future G·E work should focus on positive as well as negative environmental conditions and developmental outcomes. Keywords: Self-control, self-regulation, plasticity, G·E, parenting. The capacity to control or regulate one’s emotions, cognitions and behavior is central to competent functioning (Gottfredson & Hirschi, 1990; Vazsonyi & Huang, 2010). Extensive research on executive function, the brain processes that regulate cognition and action, as well as on the regulation of feelings and behavior, shows that limitations in these capacities are related to disturbances in development and functioning (Pratt & Cullen, 2000). The fact that the frontal cortex, implicated in the development of executive function, continues to develop during the adolescent years clearly suggests that experiences during the second decade of life could influence self-control (Blakemore & Choudhury, 2006). This is why the research reported herein

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References
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Beyond Diathesis Stress: Differential Susceptibility to Environmental Influences.

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Neuroplasticity: changes in grey matter induced by training.

TL;DR: This discovery of a stimulus-dependent alteration in the brain's macroscopic structure contradicts the traditionally held view that cortical plasticity is associated with functional rather than anatomical changes.
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