Boardman Jason D, Menard Scott, Roettger Michael E, Knight Kelly E, Boutwell Brian B, Smolen Andrew
Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado ; Department of Sociology, University of Colorado.
College of Criminal Justice, Sam Houston State University.
Crim Justice Behav. 2014 Jun;41(6):713-731. doi: 10.1177/0093854813514227.
This paper examines the interaction between social control and social risk mechanisms and genes within the dopaminergic system (DAT1 and DRD2) as related to serious and violent forms of delinquent behavior among adolescents and young adults. We use nine waves of data from the National Youth Survey Family Study to examine the relevance of protective or risky social factors at four social levels including school, neighborhood, friends, and family within the gene-environment interaction framework. We extend previous work in this area by providing a testable typology of gene-environment interactions derived from current theories in this area. We find consistent evidence that the associations between putatively risky genotypes and delinquent behavior are suppressed within protective social environments. We also provide some evidence that supports the differential susceptibility hypothesis for these outcomes. Our findings largely confirm the conclusions of previous work and continue to highlight the critical role of the social environment within candidate gene studies of complex behaviors.
本文研究了社会控制与社会风险机制以及多巴胺能系统(DAT1和DRD2)内的基因之间的相互作用,这些与青少年和青年严重及暴力形式的犯罪行为相关。我们使用来自全国青年调查家庭研究的九波数据,在基因-环境相互作用框架内,考察学校、邻里、朋友和家庭这四个社会层面上保护性或风险性社会因素的相关性。我们通过提供一种基于该领域当前理论推导出来的可检验的基因-环境相互作用类型学,扩展了该领域之前的研究工作。我们发现了一致的证据,即在保护性社会环境中,假定的风险性基因型与犯罪行为之间的关联会受到抑制。我们还提供了一些证据来支持这些结果的差异易感性假说。我们的研究结果在很大程度上证实了先前研究的结论,并继续凸显了社会环境在复杂行为候选基因研究中的关键作用。