
Using DNA From Mothers and Children to Study Parental Investment in Children's Educational Attainment.
This study tested implications of new genetic discoveries for understanding the association between parental investment and children's educational attainment. A novel design matched genetic data from 860 British mothers and their children with home-visit measures of parenting: the E-Risk Study. Three findings emerged. First, both mothers' and children's education-associated genetics, summarized in a genome-wide polygenic score, were associated with parenting-a gene-environment correlation. Second, accounting for genetic influences slightly reduced associations between parenting and children's attainment-indicating some genetic confounding. Third, mothers' genetics were associated with children's attainment over and above children's own genetics, via cognitively stimulating parenting-an environmentally mediated effect. Findings imply that, when interpreting parents' effects on children, environmentalists must consider genetic transmission, but geneticists must also consider environmental transmission.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Parenting
- Mothers
- Male
- Humans
- Genome-Wide Association Study
- Female
- Developmental & Child Psychology
- DNA
- Child, Preschool
- Child
Citation

Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Parenting
- Mothers
- Male
- Humans
- Genome-Wide Association Study
- Female
- Developmental & Child Psychology
- DNA
- Child, Preschool
- Child