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Journal ArticleDOI

Parenting: a genetic-epidemiologic perspective.

Kenneth S. Kendler
- 01 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 153, Iss: 1, pp 11-20
TLDR
The provision of parenting is influenced by attitudes derived from the parent's family of origin as well as by genetically influenced parental temperamental characteristics, which are influenced by temperamental traits of the offspring that are under partial genetic control.
Abstract
Objective : To understand the relation between parenting and later psychopathology, it is important to clarify the role of genetic and environmental factors in both the elicitation and the provision of parenting behavior. Method : A 16-item version of the Parental Bonding Instrument was administered to 1) 606 fathers and 848 mothers of an epidemiologic sample of adult female-female twin pairs, who reported on their parenting of their twins ; 2) the twins (both members of 546 monozygotic and 390 dizygotic pairs), who reported on the parenting they had received from their father and mother ; 3) co-twins from these pairs, who reported on the parenting provided by their father and mother to their twin sister ; and 4) members of the adult twin pairs (145 monozygotic and 117 dizygotic) who both had children, who reported on the parenting they provided to their offspring. The data were subjected to model fitting decomposing three sources of variance : additive genetic factors ; family, or common, environment ; and an individual's unique environment. Results : Responses to the Parental Bonding Instrument produced three factors : parental warmth, protectiveness, and authoritarianism. According to parents, these factors were largely a common environmental experience for their children. Responses from twins, however, indicated that genetic factors played a substantial role in the elicitation of warmth from parents and a more modest role in influencing parental protectiveness and authoritarianism. While reports of twins and co-twins on protectiveness and authoritarianism yielded similar results, analysis of responses from co-twins indicated a degree of importance of genetic factors in eliciting parental warmth which was midway between that from parents' reports and twins' reports. Answers from twins as parents indicated that provision of warmth was substantially heritable, while resemblance between twins in providing protectiveness and authoritarianism was due to family environment. Conclusions: The provision of parenting is influenced by attitudes derived from the parent's family of origin as well as by genetically influenced parental temperamental characteristics. The elicitation of parenting is influenced by temperamental traits of the offspring that are, in turn, under partial genetic control. Genetic factors in both parent and child are more important for warmth than for protectiveness or authoritarianism.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Childhood sexual abuse and adult psychiatric and substance use disorders in women: an epidemiological and cotwin control analysis

TL;DR: Results are consistent with the hypothesis that CSA is causally related to an increased risk for psychiatric and substance abuse disorders and cannot be explained by background familial factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender differences in ADHD: A meta-analysis and critical review

TL;DR: The need for future research examining gender differences in ADHD is strongly indicated, with attention to methodological limitations of the current literature, including the potential confounding effects of referral bias, comorbidity, developmental patterns, diagnostic procedures, and rater source.
Book

Male, Female: The Evolution of Human Sex Differences

TL;DR: Geary presents a theoretical bridge linking parenting, mate choices, and competition, with children's development and sex differences in brain and cognition, in a lively and nuanced application of Darwin's insight to help explain the authors' heritage and their place in the natural world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parenting Stress and Child Adjustment: Some Old Hypotheses and New Questions

TL;DR: In this paper, a definition of parenting stress is provided, along with its application to more general stress models, and three implicit hypotheses in much of the past research on parenting stress and behavior are evaluated: (a) parenting stress was causally related to poor parenting, (b) poor parenting is causally linked to problems in child adjustment, and (c) parenting behavior mediates the associations between parent stress and child adjustment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The New Look of Behavioral Genetics in Developmental Psychopathology: Gene-Environment Interplay in Antisocial Behaviors.

TL;DR: Behavioral-genetic research can help address questions of causation in developmental psychopathology, and future work on gene-environment interplay is envisaged, arguing that it is an interesting and profitable way forward for psychopathology research.
References
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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.
Book

Methodology for Genetic Studies of Twins and Families

TL;DR: The LISREL Script for Rater Bias Model and Data for Simplex Model as mentioned in this paper is one of the most well-known models in the literature for gene expression analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Parental Bonding Instrument

TL;DR: The Maudsley Obsessional-Compulsive Inventory (OCI) and Leyton Obsessionality Inventory (LOI) were used by as discussed by the authors to assess perceived levels of parental care and overprotection.
Journal ArticleDOI

A reinterpretation of the direction of effects in studies of socialization.

TL;DR: In this article, a set of propositions concerning the effects of congenital factors in children on parent behavior are presented, which can be interpreted plausibly as indicating effects of children on parents.
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How to combine epidemiology and parenting ?

By utilizing genetic-epidemiologic perspective, this study combines epidemiology and parenting to explore how genetic and environmental factors influence both the elicitation and provision of parenting behavior.