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32. Emde, R. N., Plomin, R., Robinson, J., Reznick, J. S., Campos, J., Corley, R., DeFries, J. C., Fulker, D. W., Kagan, J., & Zahn-Waxler, C. (1992). Temperament, emotion, and cognition at 14 months: The MacArthur Longitudinal Twin Study. Child Development, 63, 1437-1455.Two hundred pairs of twins were assessed at 14 months of age in the laboratory
and home. Measures were obtained of temperament, emotion, and cognition/language.
Comparisons between identical and fraternal twin correlations suggest
that individual differences are due in part to heritable influences. For
temperament, genetic influence was significant for behavioral observations
of inhibition to the unfamiliar, for tester ratings of activity, and parental
rating of temperament. For emotion, significant genetic influence was
found for empathy and parental rating of negative emotion. The estimate
of heritability for parental report of expression of negative emotions
was relatively high, whereas that for expression of positive emotions
was low, a finding which is consistent with previous research. For cognition
and language, genetic influence was significant for behavioral indices
of spatial memory, categorization, and word comprehension. Shared rearing
environment appears influential for parental reports of language and for
positive emotions but not for other measures of emotion or for temperament. |