Publication | Open Access
Critical Need for Family-Based, Quasi-Experimental Designs in Integrating Genetic and Social Science Research
344
Citations
69
References
2013
Year
Family MedicineParental CareGenetic FoundationSocial Determinants Of HealthPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyFamily SystemsBiosocial InteractionsBiological Moderating FactorsFamily InteractionIntegrating GeneticPublic HealthDevelopmental EpidemiologyEarly Life ExposureBehavioral SciencesStatistical GeneticsMaternal HealthMaternal SmokingChild DevelopmentQuasi-experimental DesignsCritical NeedExperiment DesignEnvironmental RisksMedicine
Researchers have identified environmental risks that predict subsequent psychological and medical problems. Based on these correlational findings, researchers have developed and tested complex developmental models and have examined biological moderating factors (e.g., gene-environment interactions). In this context, we stress the critical need for researchers to use family-based, quasi-experimental designs when trying to integrate genetic and social science research involving environmental variables because these designs rigorously examine causal inferences by testing competing hypotheses. We argue that sibling comparison, offspring of twins or siblings, in vitro fertilization designs, and other genetically informed approaches play a unique role in bridging gaps between basic biological and social science research. We use studies on maternal smoking during pregnancy to exemplify these principles.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1