Authors
Oliver SP Davis, Lee M Butcher, Sophia J Docherty, Emma L Meaburn, Charles JC Curtis, Michael A Simpson, Leonard C Schalkwyk, Robert Plomin
Publication date
2010/11
Journal
Behavior genetics
Volume
40
Pages
759-767
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Childhood general cognitive ability (g) is important for a wide range of outcomes in later life, from school achievement to occupational success and life expectancy. Large-scale association studies will be essential in the quest to identify variants that make up the substantial genetic component implicated by quantitative genetic studies. We conducted a three-stage genome-wide association study for general cognitive ability using over 350,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the quantitative extremes of a population sample of 7,900 7-year-old children from the UK Twins Early Development Study. Using two DNA pooling stages to enrich true positives, each of around 1,000 children selected from the extremes of the distribution, and a third individual genotyping stage of over 3,000 children to test for quantitative associations across the normal range, we aimed to home in on genes of small effect …
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