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  2. Family resemblance (anthropology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_resemblance...

    There is evidence of heritability in personality traits. For example, one study found that approximately half of personality differences in high-school aged fraternal and identical twins were due to genetic variation - and another study suggests that no one personality trait is more heritable than another. [6] [8]

  3. Twin study - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_study

    The power of twin designs arises from the fact that twins may be either identical (monozygotic (MZ), i.e. developing from a single fertilized egg and therefore sharing all of their polymorphic alleles) or fraternal (dizygotic (DZ), i.e. developing from two fertilized eggs and therefore sharing on average 50% of their alleles, the same level of genetic similarity found in non-twin siblings).

  4. Minnesota Center for Twin and Family Research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Center_for_Twin...

    The Sibling Interaction and Behavior Study (SIBS) is a study of >600 adoptive and non-adoptive families. [1] The adoption study design allows one to disentangle the environmental and genetic influences on a phenotype, including psychological phenotypes. The assessment wave structure and protocol are similar to the Minnesota Twin Family Study ...

  5. Birth Order Traits: Your Guide to Sibling Personality Differences

    www.aol.com/news/birth-order-traits-guide...

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  6. Niche picking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niche_picking

    The personal characteristics that encourage environmental responses, such as appearance, personality, and intellect, are not the same between siblings and fraternal twins because of gene variations. Once siblings can actively interact with their environment and select environments they like, differences between their niches become clear.

  7. Family resemblance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_resemblance

    In this example, which presents an indefinitely extended ordered family, resemblance is seen in shared features: each item shares three features with his neighbors e.g. Item_2 is like Item_1 in respects B, C, D, and like Item_3 in respects C, D, E. Obviously what we call 'resemblance' involves different aspects in each particular case.

  8. Human behaviour genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_behaviour_genetics

    Traditionally, the human behavioural genetics were a psychology and phenotype based studies including intelligence, personality and grasping ability. During the years, the study developed beyond the classical traits of human behaviour and included more genetically associated traits like genetic disorders (such as fragile X syndrome , Alzheimer ...

  9. Sibling deidentification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibling_deidentification

    Much of Galton's finding wasn't due to sibling psychology because, as he explained, primogeniture laws gave firstborns an immeasurable advantage. [4] However, Galton offered another causal explanation; that firstborns receive more parental attention, which is a direct precedent for some of the psychological causes of deidentification discussed ...