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Adoption study

Adoption studies are one of the classic tools of behavioral genetics. These studies are used to estimate the degree to which variation in a trait is due to environmental and genetic influences. Adoption studies are typically used together with twin studies when estimating heritability. There are two adoption study designs. The adoptee's method investigates similarities between the adoptee and their biological and adoptive parents. Similarity with the biological parent is expected to be heritable genetic effect, while similarity with the adoptive parent is associated with home-environment, called the shared environmental effect. The familial method compares non-biological siblings who are reared in the same household. Similarity to non-biological siblings raised in the same household is attributed to shared environment effect, as the siblings are biologically unrelated but share the home environment. The most powerful form of adoption studies compare pairs of genetically-identical monozygotic identical twins who are adopted into different families (MZA); however, historical changes in adoption practices to try to keep twin pairs together make these now the rarest kind of adoption studies. Variation that cannot be accounted by either genetics or home-environment is typically described as non-shared environment. Adoption studies are one of the key tools in behavioral genetics and are typically used in combination with twin studies when making habitability estimates. Adoption studies are one of the classic tools of behavioral genetics. These studies are used to estimate the degree to which variation in a trait is due to environmental and genetic influences. Adoption studies are typically used together with twin studies when estimating heritability. There are two adoption study designs. The adoptee's method investigates similarities between the adoptee and their biological and adoptive parents. Similarity with the biological parent is expected to be heritable genetic effect, while similarity with the adoptive parent is associated with home-environment, called the shared environmental effect. The familial method compares non-biological siblings who are reared in the same household. Similarity to non-biological siblings raised in the same household is attributed to shared environment effect, as the siblings are biologically unrelated but share the home environment. The most powerful form of adoption studies compare pairs of genetically-identical monozygotic identical twins who are adopted into different families (MZA); however, historical changes in adoption practices to try to keep twin pairs together make these now the rarest kind of adoption studies. Variation that cannot be accounted by either genetics or home-environment is typically described as non-shared environment. Adoption studies are one of the key tools in behavioral genetics and are typically used in combination with twin studies when making habitability estimates. Adoption study's are meant to evaluate genetic and environmental influences on phenotype.

[ "Genetics", "Clinical psychology", "Social psychology", "Psychiatry", "Developmental psychology" ]
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