Twin study shows genetics shape success more than upbringing

New research from a major twin project suggests that genes play a larger role in determining education, career, and income than family environment alone. The findings come from tracking participants from age 23 to 27 and highlight the strong genetic link to IQ. Experts say the results challenge assumptions about how much upbringing can override inherited traits.

Researchers followed roughly 880 twins through the German TwinLife project, comparing identical twins who share all genes with fraternal twins who share about half. IQ tests taken at age 23 strongly predicted socioeconomic status four years later, with genetics accounting for an estimated 75 percent of IQ variation and 69 to 98 percent of the IQ-to-status connection.

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Split image of two brains illustrating high and low connectivity patterns in autism from a scientific study.
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Brain scans and mouse studies point to two autism connectivity subtypes

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A large study combining human brain imaging with data from genetically engineered mouse models has identified two recurring patterns of brain connectivity in autism—one marked by higher-than-typical connectivity and another marked by lower connectivity—each tied to different biological pathways, researchers report.

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