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GWAS Study

Genetic influences on political ideologies: twin analyses of 19 measures of political ideologies from five democracies and genome-wide findings from three populations.

Hatemi PK, Medland SE, Klemmensen R et al.

24569950 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
11388 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HP
Hatemi PK
MS
Medland SE
KR
Klemmensen R
OS
Oskarsson S
LL
Littvay L
DC
Dawes CT
VB
Verhulst B
MR
McDermott R
NA
Nørgaard AS
KC
Klofstad CA
CK
Christensen K
JM
Johannesson M
MP
Magnusson PK
EL
Eaves LJ
MN
Martin NG
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Almost 40 years ago, evidence from large studies of adult twins and their relatives suggested that between 30 and 60% of the variance in social and political attitudes could be explained by genetic influences. However, these findings have not been widely accepted or incorporated into the dominant paradigms that explain the etiology of political ideology. This has been attributed in part to measurement and sample limitations, as well the relative absence of molecular genetic studies. Here we present results from original analyses of a combined sample of over 12,000 twins pairs, ascertained from nine different studies conducted in five democracies, sampled over the course of four decades. We provide evidence that genetic factors play a role in the formation of political ideology, regardless of how ideology is measured, the era, or the population sampled. The only exception is a question that explicitly uses the phrase "Left-Right". We then present results from one of the first genome-wide association studies on political ideology using data from three samples: a 1990 Australian sample involving 6,894 individuals from 3,516 families; a 2008 Australian sample of 1,160 related individuals from 635 families and a 2010 Swedish sample involving 3,334 individuals from 2,607 families. No polymorphisms reached genome-wide significance in the meta-analysis. The combined evidence suggests that political ideology constitutes a fundamental aspect of one's genetically informed psychological disposition, but as Fisher proposed long ago, genetic influences on complex traits will be composed of thousands of markers of very small effects and it will require extremely large samples to have enough power in order to identify specific polymorphisms related to complex social traits.

11,388 European ancestry individuals from 6,758 families

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

11388
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Sweden, Australia
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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