Abstract
This study tested whether multiple domains of social adversity, including neighborhood opportunity/deprivation and life stress, moderate genetic (A), common environmental (C), and unique environmental (E) influences on externalizing behaviors in 760 same-sex twin pairs (332 monozygotic; 428 dizygotic) ages 10–11 from the ABCD Study. Proportion of C influences on externalizing behavior increased at higher neighborhood adversity (lower overall opportunity). A decreased and C and E increased at lower levels of educational opportunity. A increased at lower health-environment and social-economic opportunity levels. For life stress, A decreased and E increased with number of experienced events. Results for educational opportunity and stressful life experiences suggest a bioecological gene-environment interaction pattern such that environmental influences predominate at higher levels of adversity, whereas limited access to healthcare, housing, and employment stability may potentiate genetic liability for externalizing behavior via a diathesis-stress mechanism. More detailed operationalization of social adversity in gene-environment interaction studies is needed.
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Dash, G. F., Karalunas, S. L., Kenyon, E. A., Carter, E. K., Mooney, M. A., Nigg, J. T., & Feldstein Ewing, S. W. (2023). Gene-by-Environment Interaction Effects of Social Adversity on Externalizing Behavior in ABCD Youth. Behavior Genetics, 53(3), 219–231. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10519-023-10136-z
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