학술논문

Genetic and Environmental Influences on Semantic Verbal Fluency Across Midlife and Later Life
Document Type
article
Source
Behavior Genetics. 51(2)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Health Sciences
Psychology
Genetics
Clinical Research
Aging
Brain Disorders
Neurosciences
Prevention
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Quality Education
Aged
Australia
Cognition
Databases
Factual
Databases
Genetic
Denmark
Female
Gene-Environment Interaction
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neuropsychological Tests
Semantics
Speech
Twins
United States
Verbal Behavior
Verbal fluency
Twin study
Heritability
Gene-by-environment interaction
IGEMS Consortium
Zoology
Genetics & Heredity
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Despite the relevance of semantic fluency measures to risk for dementia and psychiatric disorders, little is known about their genetic and environmental architecture in mid-to-late life. Participants represent 21,684 middle-aged and older adult twins (M = 60.84 years, SD = 11.21; Range 40-89) from six studies from three countries participating in the Interplay of Genes and Environment across Multiple Studies (IGEMS) consortium. All completed the same measure of semantic fluency (naming animals in 60 seconds). Results revealed small-to-moderate phenotypic associations with age and education, with education more strongly and positively associated with fluency performance in females than males. Heritability and environmental influences did not vary by age. Environmental variance was smaller with higher levels of education, but this effect was observed only in males. This is the largest study to examine the genetic and environmental architecture of semantic fluency, and the first to demonstrate that environmental influences vary based on levels of education.