Where you live matters: visualizing environmental effects on reading attainment

Author:

Shero Jeffrey A.1ORCID,Erbeli Florina2ORCID,Reed Zoe E.34ORCID,Haughbrook Rasheda5,Davis Oliver S. P.3467,Hart Sara A.58,Taylor Jeanette E.9

Affiliation:

1. Department of Special Education Vanderbilt University Nashville TN USA

2. Department of Educational Psychology Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

3. School of Psychological Science University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit University of Bristol Bristol UK

5. Department of Psychology Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA

6. Bristol Medical School University of Bristol Bristol UK

7. The Alan Turing Institute London UK

8. Florida Center for Reading Research Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA

9. Department of Psychology University of Georgia Athens GA USA

Abstract

BackgroundThe way in which socioeconomic status (SES) moderates the etiology of reading attainment has been explored many times, with past work often finding that genetic influences are suppressed under conditions of socioeconomic deprivation and more fully realized under conditions of socioeconomic advantage: a gene–SES interaction. Additionally, past work has pointed toward the presence of gene–location interactions, with the relative influence of genes and environment varying across geographic regions of the same country/state.MethodThis study investigates the extent to which SES and geographical location interact to moderate the genetic and environmental components of reading attainment. Utilizing data from 2,135 twin pairs in Florida (mean age 13.82 years, range 10.71–17.77), the study operationalized reading attainment as reading comprehension scores from a statewide test and SES as household income. We applied a spatial twin analysis procedure to investigate how twin genetic and environmental estimates vary by geographic location. We then expanded this analysis to explore how the moderating role of SES on said genetic and environmental influences also varied by geographic location.ResultsA gene–SES interaction was found, with heritability of reading being suppressed in lower‐ (23%) versus higher‐SES homes (78%). The magnitude of the moderating parameters were not consistent by location, however, and ranged from −0.10 to 0.10 for the moderating effect on genetic influences, and from −0.30 to 0.05 for the moderating effect on environmental influences. For smaller areas and those with less socioeconomic variability, the magnitude of the genetic moderating parameter was high, giving rise to more fully realized genetic influences on reading there.ConclusionsSES significantly influences reading variability. However, a child's home location matters in both the overall etiology and how strongly SES moderates said etiologies. These results point toward the presence of multiple significant environmental factors that simultaneously, and inseparably, influence the underlying etiology of reading attainment.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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4. Visual analysis of geocoded twin data puts nature and nurture on the map

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