TY - JOUR PY - 2018// TI - Genetics, the rearing environment, and the intergenerational transmission of divorce: a Swedish national adoption study JO - Psychological science A1 - Salvatore, Jessica E. A1 - Larsson Lönn, Sara A1 - Sundquist, Jan A1 - Sundquist, Kristina A1 - Kendler, Kenneth S. SP - 370 EP - 378 VL - 29 IS - 3 N2 - We used classical and extended adoption designs in Swedish registries to disentangle genetic and rearing-environment influences on the intergenerational transmission of divorce. In classical adoption analyses, adoptees ( n = 19,715) resembled their biological parents, rather than their adoptive parents, in their history of divorce. In extended adoption analyses, offspring ( n = 82,698) resembled their not-lived-with fathers and their lived-with mothers. There was stronger resemblance to lived-with mothers, providing indirect evidence of rearing-environment influences on the intergenerational transmission of divorce. The heritability of divorce assessed across generations was 0.13. We attempted to replicate our findings using within-generation data from adoptive and biological siblings ( ns = 8,523-53,097). Adoptees resembled their biological, not adoptive, siblings in their history of divorce. Thus, there was consistent evidence that genetic factors contributed to the intergenerational transmission of divorce but weaker evidence for a rearing-environment effect of divorce. Within-generation data from siblings supported these conclusions.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0956-7976 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0956797617734864 ID - ref1 ER -