Genetic sources of covariation among P3(00) and online performance variables in a delayed-response working memory task


Autoria(s): Wright, M. J.; Luciano, M.; Hansell, N. K.; Geffen, G. M.; Geffen, L. B.; Martin, N. G.
Contribuinte(s)

R. Simons

Data(s)

01/10/2002

Resumo

Genetic and environmental sources of covariation among the P3(00) and online performance elicited in a delayed-response working memory task, and psychometric IQ assessed by the multidimensional aptitude battery, were examined in an adolescent twin sample. An association between frontal P3 latency and task performance (phenotypic r = -0.33; genotypic r = -0.49) was indicated, with genes (i.e. twin status) accounting for a large part of the covariation ( > 70%). In contrast, genes influencing P3 amplitude mediated only a small part (2%) of the total genetic variation in task performance. While task performance mediated 15% of the total genetic variation in IQ (phenotypic r = 0.22; genotypic r = 0.39) there was no association between P3 latency and IQ or P3 amplitude with IQ. The findings provide some insight into the inter-relationships among psychophysiological, performance and psychometric measures of cognitive ability, and provide support for a levels-of-processing genetic model of cognition where genes act on specific sub-components of cognitive processes.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:61438

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Science

Palavras-Chave #Behavioral Sciences #Psychology #Psychology, Biological #Psychology, Experimental #P3 (p300) #Working Memory #Twin Study #Event-related Potentials #IQ #Multivariate Genetic Analyses #Individual Differences #Individual-differences #P300 Latency #Prefrontal Cortex #Dizygotic Twins #Reaction-time #C1 #321011 Medical Genetics #730211 Mental health
Tipo

Journal Article