The Genetic Architecture of Oral Language, Reading Fluency, and Reading Comprehension: A Twin Study From 7 to 16 Years

This study examines the genetic and environmental etiology underlying the development of oral language and reading skills, and the relationship between them, over a long period of developmental time spanning middle childhood and adolescence. It focuses particularly on the differential relationship b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental psychology 2017-06, Vol.53 (6), p.1115-1129
Hauptverfasser: Tosto, Maria G, Hayiou-Thomas, Marianna E, Harlaar, Nicole, Prom-Wormley, Elizabeth, Dale, Philip S, Plomin, Robert
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container_end_page 1129
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1115
container_title Developmental psychology
container_volume 53
creator Tosto, Maria G
Hayiou-Thomas, Marianna E
Harlaar, Nicole
Prom-Wormley, Elizabeth
Dale, Philip S
Plomin, Robert
description This study examines the genetic and environmental etiology underlying the development of oral language and reading skills, and the relationship between them, over a long period of developmental time spanning middle childhood and adolescence. It focuses particularly on the differential relationship between language and two different aspects of reading: reading fluency and reading comprehension. Structural equation models were applied to language and reading data at 7, 12, and 16 years from the large-scale TEDS twin study. A series of multivariate twin models show a clear patterning of oral language with reading comprehension, as distinct from reading fluency: significant but moderate genetic overlap between oral language and reading fluency (genetic correlation rg = .46-.58 at 7, 12, and 16) contrasts with very substantial genetic overlap between oral language and reading comprehension (rg = .81-.87, at 12 and 16). This pattern is even clearer in a latent factors model, fit to the data aggregated across ages, in which a single factor representing oral language and reading comprehension is correlated with-but distinct from-a second factor representing reading fluency. A distinction between oral language and reading fluency is also apparent in different developmental trajectories: While the heritability of oral language increases over the period from 7 to 12 to 16 years (from h2 = .27 to .47 to .55), the heritability of reading fluency is high and largely stable over the same period of time (h2 = .73 to .71 to .64).
doi_str_mv 10.1037/dev0000297
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subjects Achievement Tests
Adolescent
Adolescents
Age Differences
Age Factors
Child
Child Language
Childhood
Children
Children & youth
Children's Cognitive and Social-Cognitive Development
Comprehension - physiology
Correlation
Environmental Effects
Environmental Influences
Etiology
Female
Fluency
Foreign Countries
Gene-Environment Interaction
Genetics
Heritability
Human
Humans
Intelligence Tests
Language
Language Development
Language Tests
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Multivariate Analysis
Oral Communication
Oral Language
Pragmatics
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Reading Fluency
Reading Skills
Semantics
Speech - physiology
Statistics as Topic
Structural equation modeling
Structural Equation Models
Syntax
Teenagers
Twin studies
Twins
Verbal communication
Vocabulary
Vocabulary Development
title The Genetic Architecture of Oral Language, Reading Fluency, and Reading Comprehension: A Twin Study From 7 to 16 Years
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