Using Genetic Analyses to Clarify the Distinction Between Depressive and Anxious Symptoms in Children |
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Authors: | Thalia C. Eley Jim Stevenson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Behavioural Sciences Unit, Institute of Child Health, University of London, London, United Kingdom;(2) Centre for Research into Psychological Development, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom;(3) The Social, Genetic, and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, London, SE5 8AF, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | Self-report measures of depression and anxiety in children are highly correlated and distinguishing between shared and independent factors in their etiologies is therefore problematic. The aim of this article was to test whether less correlated measures of depression and anxiety could be produced and, if so, what genetic and environmental factors would account for the variance in these symptoms. Second-order factor analysis of the items from two standardized self-report questionnaires of depression and anxiety collected from 395 pairs of same-sex twins aged 8 to 16 years resulted in purer dimensions of depression and anxiety. Behavioral genetic analyses confirmed the distinction between these two dimensions, and bivariate analyses revealed that the association between the two was primarily accounted for by shared genetic factors. |
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Keywords: | Anxiety depression comorbidity etiology twins |
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