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NATURE, NURTURE, AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT FROM 1 TO 16 YEARS:
A Parent-Offspring Adoption Study
Robert Plomin 1 , David W. Fulker 2 , Robin Corley 2 John C DeFnes 2
  1 Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, London, United Kingdom   2 Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado, Boulder
 Address correspondence to Robert Plomin Social Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, DeCrespigny Park, Denmark Hill, London, SE5 8AF, United Kingdom e-mail r.plomin@top.bpmf.ac.uk
Copyright 1997 American Psychological Society

ABSTRACT

Abstract—Children increasingly resemble their parents in cognitive abilities from infancy through adolescence Results obtained from a 20-year longitudinal adoption study of 245 adopted children and their biological and adoptive parents, as well as 245 matched nonadoptive (control) parents and offspring, show that this increasing resemblance is due to genetic factors Adopted children resemble their adaptive parents slightly in early childhood but not at all in middle childhood or adolescence. In contrast, during childhood and adolescence, adopted children become more like their biological parents, and to the same degree as children and parents in control families Although these results were strongest for general cognitive ability and verbal ability similar results were found for other specific cognitive abilities—spatial ability, speed of processing, and recognition memory. These findings indicate that within this population, genes that stably adolescence and that environmental factors that contribute to cognitive development are not correlated with parents' cognitive ability.


(Recetved 3/17/97 Accepted 4/16/97)

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9280.1997.tb00458.x About DOI

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