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Genetic contributions of noncognitive skills to academic development.

Margherita MalanchiniAndrea G AllegriniMichel G NivardPietro BiroliKaili RimfeldRosa CheesmanSophie von StummPerline A DemangeElsje van BergenAndrew D GrotzingerLaurel RaffingtonJavier De la FuenteJean-Baptiste PingaultK Paige HardenElliot M Tucker-DrobRobert Plomin
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Noncognitive skills such as motivation and self-regulation, predict academic achievement beyond cognitive skills. However, the role of genetic and environmental factors and of their interplay in these developmental associations remains unclear. We provide a comprehensive account of how cognitive and noncognitive skills contribute to academic achievement from ages 7 to 16 in a sample of >10,000 children from England and Wales. Results indicated that noncognitive skills become increasingly predictive of academic achievement across development. Triangulating genetic methods, including twin analyses and polygenic scores (PGS), we found that the contribution of noncognitive genetics to academic achievement becomes stronger over development. The PGS for noncognitive skills predicted academic achievement developmentally, with prediction nearly doubling by age 16, pointing to gene-environment correlation (rGE). Within-family analyses indicated both passive and active/evocative rGE processes driven by noncognitive genetics. By studying genetic effects through a developmental lens, we provide novel insights into the role of noncognitive skills in academic development.
Keyphrases
  • medical students
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • transcription factor