Genetic and Environmental Influences on Perceived Stress in South Korean Twins.
Gwanwoo JoYoon-Mi HurPublished in: Twin research and human genetics : the official journal of the International Society for Twin Studies (2024)
Researchers have proposed that culture significantly influences perceived stress (PS). To date, however, twin studies on PS have been conducted mostly in western, individualistic cultures, which demonstrate that PS due to controllable (personal) life events is more heritable than PS due to uncontrollable (network) life events. This study aimed to investigate genetic and environmental influences on PS in South Korean twins. South Korea practices a dominant collectivist culture. In total, 1372 twin individuals (mean age = 22.4 ± 2.5 years) completed an online survey on PS, which consisted of the scales, Friendship, Academic Stress, Future Career, Family Conflicts, and Family Financial Difficulties (FFD). Friendship, Academic Stress, and Future Career can be considered PS due to personal life events, and Family Conflict and FFD, PS due to network life events. The general sex-limitation model-fitting analysis revealed the absence of qualitative or quantitative sex differences in genetic and environmental influences. Specifically, additive genetic influences were predominant for Friendship (63%), Academic Stress (67%), and Future Career (57%) for both sexes, with the remaining variance attributable to nonshared environmental influences. In contrast, shared environmental influences were largest for Family Conflict (47% for both genders) and FFD (64% for males, 63% for females) with no significant genetic effects. Despite known cultural differences in the means and variances of PS, South Korean twins exhibited significant genetic effects in PS due to personal life events and large shared environmental effects in PS due to network life events, which is similar to western samples.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- human health
- copy number
- physical activity
- depressive symptoms
- medical students
- mental health
- healthcare
- primary care
- stress induced
- life cycle
- south africa
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- gestational age
- magnetic resonance imaging
- young adults
- climate change
- heat stress
- single cell
- preterm birth
- health insurance