Genetic and environmental covariation between verbal and nonverbal cognitive development in infancy
Genetic and environmental covariation between verbal and nonverbal cognitive development in infancy
Despite cognitive neuroscience's emphasis on the modularity of cognitive processes, multivariate genetic research indicates that the same genetic factors largely affect diverse cognitive abilities, at least from middle childhood onward. We explored this issue for verbal and nonverbal cognitive development in infancy in a study of 1,937 pairs of same-sex 2-year-old twins born in England and Wales in 1994. The twins were assessed by having their parents use a measure of productive vocabulary (the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory) and a novel measure of nonverbal cognitive abilities (Parent Report of Children's Ability). Verbal and nonverbal development correlated .42. A multivariate genetic analysis indicated that genetic factors were responsible for less than half of this phenotypic correlation. Moreover, the genetic correlation between verbal and nonverbal abilities was only .30, which indicates that genetic effects on verbal and nonverbal abilities are largely independent in infancy. These multivariate genetic results suggest that genetic effects on cognitive abilities are modular early in development and then become increasingly molar. The implications of this result for theories of cognitive development are discussed.
948-959
Price, Thomas S.
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Eley, Thalia C.
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Dale, Philip S.
3a9beaac-8207-49d1-94ee-77a65399a9d1
Stevenson, Jim
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Sandino, Kim
25139db3-2d78-48ce-a477-b794e75a1efb
Plomin, Robert
556f296a-0ec6-4b68-b2b8-57872652b242
2000
Price, Thomas S.
10c6fb03-35f4-41fc-bf9b-d8f525f90030
Eley, Thalia C.
d9e3a546-3c35-4207-b074-2ced31f91f94
Dale, Philip S.
3a9beaac-8207-49d1-94ee-77a65399a9d1
Stevenson, Jim
0c85d29b-d294-43cb-ab8d-75e4737478e1
Sandino, Kim
25139db3-2d78-48ce-a477-b794e75a1efb
Plomin, Robert
556f296a-0ec6-4b68-b2b8-57872652b242
Price, Thomas S., Eley, Thalia C., Dale, Philip S., Stevenson, Jim, Sandino, Kim and Plomin, Robert
(2000)
Genetic and environmental covariation between verbal and nonverbal cognitive development in infancy.
Child Development, 71 (4), .
(doi:10.1111/1467-8624.00201).
Abstract
Despite cognitive neuroscience's emphasis on the modularity of cognitive processes, multivariate genetic research indicates that the same genetic factors largely affect diverse cognitive abilities, at least from middle childhood onward. We explored this issue for verbal and nonverbal cognitive development in infancy in a study of 1,937 pairs of same-sex 2-year-old twins born in England and Wales in 1994. The twins were assessed by having their parents use a measure of productive vocabulary (the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory) and a novel measure of nonverbal cognitive abilities (Parent Report of Children's Ability). Verbal and nonverbal development correlated .42. A multivariate genetic analysis indicated that genetic factors were responsible for less than half of this phenotypic correlation. Moreover, the genetic correlation between verbal and nonverbal abilities was only .30, which indicates that genetic effects on verbal and nonverbal abilities are largely independent in infancy. These multivariate genetic results suggest that genetic effects on cognitive abilities are modular early in development and then become increasingly molar. The implications of this result for theories of cognitive development are discussed.
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Published date: 2000
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Local EPrints ID: 18380
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18380
ISSN: 0009-3920
PURE UUID: 49b6b036-2fa1-409a-ac32-6618efbefaad
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:04
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Author:
Thomas S. Price
Author:
Thalia C. Eley
Author:
Philip S. Dale
Author:
Kim Sandino
Author:
Robert Plomin
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