Perry Brea L
AJS. 2016 May;121(6):1655-96. doi: 10.1086/685486.
Evidence that social and biological processes are intertwined in producing health and human behavior is rapidly accumulating. Using a feminist approach, this research explores how gender moderates the interaction between biological processes and men's and women's behavioral and emotional responses to similar social environments. Using data from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism, the influence of gender, social integration, and genetic risk on nicotine and alcohol dependence is examined. Three-way interaction models reveal gender-specific moderation of interactions between genetic risk score and social integration. Namely, being currently married and reporting positive social psychological integration are predictive of reduced risk of nicotine dependence among men with genetic susceptibility to strong nicotine cravings in the presence of social cues like stress. In contrast, the protective effects of marital status and social integration are substantially attenuated and absent, respectively, among women with high-risk genotypes. This pattern reflects the dualism (i.e., simultaneous costs and benefits) inherent in social integration for women, which may disproportionately affect those with a genetic sensitivity to stress. These findings contest the notion of genotype as static biological hardwiring that is independent from social and cultural systems of gender difference.
社会和生物过程在产生健康和人类行为方面相互交织的证据正在迅速积累。本研究采用女性主义方法,探讨性别如何调节生物过程与男性和女性对相似社会环境的行为及情绪反应之间的相互作用。利用酒精中毒遗传学合作研究的数据,研究了性别、社会融合和遗传风险对尼古丁和酒精依赖的影响。三向交互作用模型揭示了遗传风险评分与社会融合之间交互作用的性别特异性调节。具体而言,在存在压力等社会线索的情况下,对于有强烈尼古丁渴望遗传易感性的男性,目前已婚且报告有积极的社会心理融合可预测尼古丁依赖风险降低。相比之下,在具有高风险基因型的女性中,婚姻状况和社会融合的保护作用分别大幅减弱和不存在。这种模式反映了社会融合对女性固有的二元性(即同时存在成本和收益),这可能对那些对压力具有遗传敏感性的女性产生不成比例的影响。这些发现对基因型是独立于性别差异的社会和文化系统的静态生物连线这一观念提出了质疑。