Reaction time inhibition, working memory and 'delay aversion' performance: Genetic influences and their interpretation

Jonna Kuntsi*, Hannah Rogers, Greer Swinard, Norbert Börger, Jaap van der Meere, Fruhling Rijsdijk, Philip Asherson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

105 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. For candidate endophenotypes to be useful for psychiatric genetic research, they first of all need to show significant genetic influences. To address the relative lack of previous data, we set to investigate the extent of genetic and environmental influences on performance in a set of theoretically driven cognitive-experimental tasks in a large twin sample. We further aimed to illustrate how test-retest reliability of the measures affects the estimates.

Method. Four-hundred 7- to 9-year-old twin pairs were assessed individually on tasks measuring reaction time, inhibition, working memory and 'delay aversion' performance. Test-retest reliability data on some of the key measures were available from a previous study.

Results. Several key measures of reaction time, inhibition and working-memory performance indicated a moderate degree of genetic influence. Combining data across theoretically related tasks increased the heritability estimates, as illustrated by the heritability estimates of 60% for mean reaction time and 50% for reaction-time variability. Psychometric properties (reliability or ceiling effects) had a substantial influence on the estimates for some measures.

Conclusions. The data support the usefulness of several of the variables for endophenotype studies that aim to link genes to cognitive and motivational processes. Importantly, the data also illustrate specific conditions under which the true extent of genetic influences may be underestimated and hence the usefulness for genetic mapping studies compromised, and suggest ways to address this.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1613-1624
Number of pages12
JournalPsychological Medicine
Volume36
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov-2006

Keywords

  • TEST-RETEST RELIABILITY
  • ADHD CHILDREN
  • ATTENTION
  • PRESCHOOLERS
  • HERITABILITY
  • CHILDHOOD
  • SPEED
  • TWINS
  • IQ

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