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Genetic influences on handedness: data from 25,732 Australian and Dutch twin families
journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by S E Medland, D L Duffy, M J Wright, G M Geffen, D A Hay, F Levy, C E M van-Beijsterveldt, G Willemsen, G C Townsend, Vicki WhiteVicki White, A W Hewitt, D A Mackey, J M Bailey, W S Slutske, D R Nyholt, S A Treloar, N G Martin, D I BoomsmaHandedness refers to a consistent asymmetry in skill or preferential use between the hands and is related to lateralization within the brain of other functions such as language. Previous twin studies of handedness have yielded inconsistent results resulting from a general lack of statistical power to find significant effects. Here we present analyses from a large international collaborative study of handedness (assessed by writing/drawing or self report) in Australian and Dutch twins and their siblings (54,270 individuals from 25,732 families). Maximum likelihood analyses incorporating the effects of known covariates (sex, year of birth and birth weight) revealed no evidence of hormonal transfer, mirror imaging or twin specific effects. There were also no differences in prevalence between zygosity groups or between twins and their singleton siblings. Consistent with previous meta-analyses, additive genetic effects accounted for about a quarter (23.64%) of the variance (95%CI 20.17, 27.09%) with the remainder accounted for by non-shared environmental influences. The implications of these findings for handedness both as a primary phenotype and as a covariate in linkage and association analyses are discussed.
History
Journal
NeuropsychologiaVolume
47Issue
2Pagination
330 - 337Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Kidlington, Eng.ISSN
0028-3932eISSN
1873-3514Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2008, ElsevierUsage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
lateralitybehavioral geneticsleft-handedextended twin family designasymmetryAdolescentAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAlgorithmsAustraliaBirth WeightChildCohort StudiesFemaleFunctional LateralityHumansMaleMiddle AgedModels, StatisticalNetherlandsReproducibility of ResultsTwinsTwins, DizygoticTwins, MonozygoticScience & TechnologySocial SciencesLife Sciences & BiomedicineBehavioral SciencesNeurosciencesPsychology, ExperimentalNeurosciences & NeurologyPsychologyPATHOLOGICAL LEFT-HANDEDNESSRELATIVE HAND SKILLCEREBRAL LATERALIZATIONLINKAGE ANALYSISBIRTH-WEIGHTPREFERENCESAMPLESCHIZOPHRENIACHILDRENRISK