Difference between revisions of "Hatemi et al. 2011"

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(Created page with "=Citation= Hatemi, P. K., Gillespie, N. A., Eaves, L. J., Maher, B. S., Webb, B. T., Heath, A. C., ... & Montgomery, G. W. (2011). A genome-wide analysis of liberal and conser...")
 
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Latest revision as of 05:02, 9 October 2018

Citation

Hatemi, P. K., Gillespie, N. A., Eaves, L. J., Maher, B. S., Webb, B. T., Heath, A. C., ... & Montgomery, G. W. (2011). A genome-wide analysis of liberal and conservative political attitudes. The Journal of Politics, 73(1), 271-285.

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Published Abstract

The assumption that the transmission of social behaviors and political preferences is purely cultural has been challenged repeatedly over the last 40 years by the combined evidence of large studies of adult twins and their relatives, adoption studies, and twins reared apart. Variance components and path modeling analyses using data from extended families quantified the overall genetic influence on political attitudes, but few studies have attempted to localize the parts of the genome which accounted for the heritability estimates found for political preferences. Here, we present the first genome-wide analysis of Conservative-Liberal attitudes from a sample of 13,000 respondents whose DNA was collected in conjunction with a 50-item sociopolitical attitude questionnaire. Several significant linkage peaks were identified and potential candidate genes discussed.