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Peer reviewedSaudino, Kimberly J.; Ronald, Angelica; Plomin, Robert – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2005
This article explores how different raters have different strengths and weaknesses. Parents know their children well, but have a narrower framework on which to base their judgments about behavior problems. Moreover, in some cases such as hyperactivity, they are prone to exaggerate differences between their children. Teachers have greater expertise…
Descriptors: Etiology, Behavior Problems, Environmental Influences, Genetics
Peer reviewedPine, Daniel S.; Klein, Rachel G.; Mannuzza, Salvatore; Moulton, John L., III; Lissek, Shmuel; Guardino, Mary; Woldehawariat, Girma – Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2005
Objective: Panic disorder (PD) has been linked to perturbed processing of threats. This study tested the hypotheses that offspring of parents with PD and offspring with anxiety disorders display relatively greater sensitivity and attention allocation to fear provocation. Method: Offspring of adults with PD, major depressive disorder (MDD), or no…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Reaction Time, Genetics, Fear
Ward, Nathan – Library Journal, 2004
Before he was wrongly sent to death row for the rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl in 1984, Kirk Bloodsworth enjoyed the life of a Chesapeake Bay waterman. Convicted largely on the testimony of a seven- and a ten-year-old eyewitness, by 1989 Johnson had exhausted almost every legal option available--after winning a new trial, he was convicted…
Descriptors: Crime, Death, Genetics, Correctional Institutions
Goin-Kochel, Robin P.; Myers, Barbara J. – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2005
Recent studies have validated the phenomenon of autistic regression, but little is known about how regressive and congenital onsets of the disorder influence parents' thinking about autism and its etiology. Parents (N = 327) of children with autism spectrum disorders completed an online questionnaire about their children's development.…
Descriptors: Etiology, Genetics, Autism, Parent Attitudes
Rothbart, Mary K.; Posner, Michael I. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2005
The executive attention network is involved in regulating emotions and cognitions, forming a neural basis for temperamental self-regulation. New brain imaging and molecular genetics methods can enhance our understanding of common mechanisms of self-regulation and individual differences in their expression.
Descriptors: Neurology, Genetics, Individual Differences, Preschool Education
White, John – Oxford Review of Education, 2005
Given well-known difficulties in justifying the Galtonian conception of intelligence as innate general intellectual capacity, a historical explanation is required of why this problematic notion became so prominent in Britain and in the USA in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Parallels are drawn between it and various features of the…
Descriptors: Protestants, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests, Genetics
Maier, Caroline Alexander – American Biology Teacher, 2004
The study describes the process of DNA-DNA hybridization and the history of its use by Sibley and Alquist in simple, straightforward, and interesting language that students easily understand to create their own phylogenetic tree of the hominoid superfamily. They calibrate the DNA clock and use it to estimate the divergence dates of the various…
Descriptors: Evolution, Primatology, Genetics, Biology
Safuanov, Ildar S. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2005
In order to teach on the basis of the genetic approach, one should undertake an analysis consisting of the following two stages: (1) a genetic elaboration of the subject matter and (2) an analysis of the arrangement of the material, including a consideration of various ways of representing it and its effect on students. The genetic elaboration of…
Descriptors: Genetics, Mental Disorders, Mental Health, Counseling
Cooper, Richard S. – American Psychologist, 2005
During the last hundred years, the debate over the meaning of race has retained a highly consistent core, despite evolution of the technical details. Non-Europeans, and in particular, Africans, are assigned the role of deviants and outcasts, whose claim on our common humanity remains in doubt. Each time the technical facade of these racialist…
Descriptors: Genetics, Race, Intelligence Quotient, Molecular Biology
Lopes, O.; Barton, G.; Morgan, J. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2005
The clinical features of this rare chromosomal syndrome are described in two individuals. Our limited knowledge of the natural history of this disorder has made it difficult to counsel parents as well as outline specific treatment and management plans. Interviews were undertaken with subjects, carers and next of kin, and the literature was…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Genetics, Interviews, Physical Disabilities
Bandopadhyay, Rina; Kingsbury, Ann E.; Cookson, Mark R.; Reid, Andrew R.; Evans, Ian M.; Hope, Andrew D.; Pittman, Alan M.; Lashley, Tammaryn; Canet-Aviles, Rosa; Miller, David W.; McLendon, Chris; Strand, Catherine; Leonard, Andrew J.; Abou-Sleiman, Patrick M.; Healy, Daniel G.; Ariga, Hiroyashi; Wood, Nicholas W.; de Silva, Rohan; Revesz, Tamas; Hardy, John A.; Lees, Andrew J. – Brain, 2004
Two mutations in the DJ-1 gene on chromosome1p36 have been identified recently to cause early-onset, autosomal recessive Parkinson's disease. As no information is available regarding the distribution of DJ-1 protein in the human brain, in this study we used a monoclonal antibody for DJ-1 to map its distribution in frontal cortex and substantia…
Descriptors: Diseases, Brain, Neurology, Neurological Impairments
Hermann, Gilbert – American Biology Teacher, 2003
Molecular genetics is a rapidly changing field with new developments almost from day to day. One interesting hypothesis that has come from everyone's ability to sequence proteins and/or genes is that of the molecular clock. This hypothesis postulates that homologous sequences of DNA and thus macro molecules evolve at a constant and invariable rate…
Descriptors: Genetics, Evolution, Molecular Biology, Science Instruction
Wahlsten, Douglas – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2007
Near the end of his illustrious career, Gottlieb lamented the continued dominance of heritability analysis in human psychology and the difficulties in winning support for the developmental point of view. Recent, spectacular progress in molecular genetic neuroscience and the genetic study of behavior, however, is rendering heritability analysis…
Descriptors: Genetics, Environmental Influences, Behavior Development, Behavior Theories
Molenaar, Peter C. M. – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2007
In this contribution it is shown that Gilbert Gottlieb's theoretical contributions to developmental science, in particular his focus on individual development and his discussion of the limitations of developmental behavior genetics in this respect, are vindicated by recent theoretical developments in mathematical biology and psychometrics.
Descriptors: Genetics, Developmental Stages, Psychometrics, Biology
Johnson, Wendy – Psychological Review, 2007
Basic quantitative genetic models of human behavioral variation have made clear that individual differences in behavior cannot be understood without acknowledging the importance of genetic influences. Yet these basic models estimate average, population-level genetic and environmental influences, obscuring differences that might exist within the…
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Genetics, Individual Differences, Behavior

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