Iervolino Alessandra C, Hines Melissa, Golombok Susan E, Rust John, Plomin Robert
Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Inistitute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK.
Child Dev. 2005 Jul-Aug;76(4):826-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2005.00880.x.
The genetic and environmental etiologies of sex-typed behavior were examined during the preschool years in a sample of 3,990 three- to four-year-old twin and non-twin sibling pairs. Results showed moderate genetic and significant shared environmental influence for boys and substantial genetic and moderate shared environmental influence for girls. For both boys and girls, twin-specific shared environmental effects contributed to twins' similarity in gender role behavior and accounted for approximately 22% of the shared environmental variance. These findings extend previous research conducted with older samples by showing not only important genetic contributions to gender role behavior but also an important role for shared environment. The inclusion of non-twin siblings showed that some of the shared environmental influence is specific to twins.
在一项针对3990对3至4岁双胞胎和非双胞胎兄弟姐妹的样本研究中,对学前阶段性别类型行为的遗传和环境病因进行了考察。结果显示,男孩存在中等程度的遗传影响和显著的共享环境影响,女孩则存在较大的遗传影响和中等程度的共享环境影响。对于男孩和女孩来说,双胞胎特有的共享环境效应导致了双胞胎在性别角色行为上的相似性,约占共享环境方差的22%。这些发现扩展了之前对年龄较大样本的研究,不仅表明了遗传对性别角色行为的重要贡献,也显示了共享环境的重要作用。纳入非双胞胎兄弟姐妹的研究表明,部分共享环境影响是双胞胎特有的。