Author:
KENDLER K. S.,KARKOWSKI L. M.,PRESCOTT C. A.
Abstract
Background. In the assessment of stressful life events (SLEs), researchers have often tried to evaluate
whether individual events are dependent or independent of the respondent's behaviour. We sought
to validate this evaluation using a twin methodology. We predicted that dependent SLEs would be
more heritable than independent SLEs.Methods. We explored, by twin modelling, the resemblance in two pairs of past-year personal and
network SLEs rated individually, by trained interviewers, on a four-point dependence–independence
scale. We examined results from two waves of interviews with 785 female–female twin pairs
ascertained from a population based registry.Results. Twin model-fitting found no evidence for genetic effects on personal or network
independent SLEs. However, familial–environmental factors played an important role in the
aetiology of network independent SLEs. For personal and network dependent SLEs, by contrast,
three of four analyses suggested a significant aetiological role for genetic factors with estimated
heritabilities ranging from 19 to 51%.Conclusions. Our results support the validity of interviewer assessments of dependence versus
independence of SLEs. As predicted, these assessments were relatively successful at distinguishing
SLEs that were influenced by genetic factors from those that were not.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
78 articles.
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