Assortative mating on educational attainment leads to genetic spousal resemblance for polygenic scores
Publication year
2016Number of pages
6 p.
Source
Intelligence, 59, (2016), pp. 103-108ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
Journal title
Intelligence
Volume
vol. 59
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 103
Page end
p. 108
Subject
Developmental PsychopathologyAbstract
We examined whether assortative mating for educational attainment ("like marries like") can be detected in the genomes of ~ 1600 UK spouse pairs of European descent. Assortative mating on heritable traits like educational attainment increases the genetic variance and heritability of the trait in the population, which may increase social inequalities. We test for genetic assortative mating in the UK on educational attainment, a phenotype that is indicative of socio-economic status and has shown substantial levels of assortative mating. We use genome-wide allelic effect sizes from a large genome-wide association study on educational attainment (N ~ 300 k) to create polygenic scores that are predictive of educational attainment in our independent sample (r = 0.23, p < 2 x 10- 16). The polygenic scores significantly predict partners' educational outcome (r = 0.14, p = 4 x 10- 8 and r = 0.19, p = 2 x 10- 14, for prediction from males to females and vice versa, respectively), and are themselves significantly correlated between spouses (r = 0.11, p = 7 x 10- 6). Our findings provide molecular genetic evidence for genetic assortative mating on education in the UK.
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- Academic publications [246216]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30432]
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