“Continuity of Genetic and Environmental Influences on Cognition across the Life Span: A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Twin and Adoption Studies”, Elliot M. Tucker-Drob, Daniel A. Briley2014-03-10 (, ; backlinks; similar)⁠:

The longitudinal rank-order stability of cognitive ability increases dramatically over the lifespan. Multiple theoretical perspectives have proposed that genetic and/or environmental mechanisms underlie the longitudinal stability of cognition, and developmental trends therein. However, the patterns of stability of genetic and environmental influences on cognition over the lifespan largely remain poorly understood.

We searched for longitudinal studies of cognition that reported raw genetically-informative longitudinal correlations or parameter estimates from longitudinal behavior genetic models. We identified 150 combinations of time points and measures from 15 independent longitudinal samples. In total, longitudinal data came from 4,538 monozygotic twin pairs raised together, 7,777 dizygotic twin pairs raised together, 34 monozygotic twin pairs raised apart, 78 dizygotic twin pairs raised apart, 141 adoptive sibling pairs, and 143 non-adoptive sibling pairs, ranging in age from infancy through late adulthood.

At all ages, cross-time genetic correlations and shared environmental correlations were substantially larger than cross-time nonshared environmental correlations. Cross-time correlations for genetic and shared environmental components were low during early childhood, increased sharply over child development, and remained relatively high from adolescence through late adulthood. Cross-time correlations for nonshared environmental components were low across childhood and increased gradually to moderate magnitudes in adulthood. Increasing phenotypic stability over child development was almost entirely mediated by genetic factors. Time-based decay of genetic and shared environmental stability was more pronounced earlier in child development.

Results: are interpreted in reference to theories of gene-environment interaction and correlation.

[Keywords: intelligence, cognitive abilities, longitudinal studies, developmental behavioral genetics, rank-order stability]

Figure 1: “Age curves of correlation coefficients between scores on selected initial tests and subsequent tests given at yearly intervals.” The x-axis (bottom) indicates participant age, and the y-axis (left) indicates the longitudinal test-retest correlation. The labels at the right indicate the age at first measurement for each corresponding connected line. From Bayley1949, “Consistency and variability in the growth of intelligence from birth to 18 years”, The Pedagogical Seminary and Journal of Genetic Psychology.
Figure 7: Temporal decay of phenotypic stability (top left panel), genetic stability (top right panel), shared environmental stability (bottom left panel), and nonshared environmental stability (bottom right panel) in childhood. Each line represents a different starting age that is followed with increasing time lags. The differential temporal decay of stability at different starting ages represents the age × time interaction.