McGuire S, Neiderhiser J M, Reiss D, Hetherington E M, Plomin R
Pennsylvania State University.
Child Dev. 1994 Jun;65(3):785-99. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1994.tb00783.x.
Although it is generally assumed that the origins of adolescents' perceptions of self-competence lie in shared family environmental influences, the contributions of nonshared environmental or genetic influences have not been explored. We investigated sibling resemblance for perceived competence and self-worth in 720 adolescent pairs aged 10 to 18 years, using a twin, full sibling, and step-sibling design. Our goals were to assess the magnitude of shared and nonshared environmental influences and to disentangle resemblance due to shared genetic heritage from that due to shared environmental experiences. Shared environment was not significant for any of the scales. 4 of the subscales showed significant genetic influence: scholastic, social, physical, and athletic competence. We also explored possible sources of genetic influences on perceived competence. Bivariate models revealed common genetic variance between scholastic competence and vocabulary and social competence and sociability. These measures, however, did not account for all of the genetic variance in perceived social and scholastic competence.
尽管人们普遍认为青少年自我能力认知的起源在于家庭环境的共同影响,但非共享环境或基因影响的作用尚未得到探究。我们采用双胞胎、全同胞和继同胞设计,对720对年龄在10至18岁的青少年进行了感知能力和自我价值的同胞相似性调查。我们的目标是评估共享和非共享环境影响的程度,并区分由于共享基因遗传和共享环境经历导致的相似性。共享环境对任何一个量表都不显著。4个分量表显示出显著的基因影响:学业、社交、身体和运动能力。我们还探究了基因对感知能力影响的可能来源。双变量模型揭示了学业能力与词汇量以及社交能力与社交性之间的共同基因方差。然而,这些测量并不能解释感知到的社交和学业能力中的所有基因方差。