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The opposite end of the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder continuum: genetic and environmental aetiologies of extremely low ADHD traits
Author(s) -
Greven Corina U.,
Merwood Andrew,
Meer Jolanda M. J.,
Haworth Claire M. A.,
Rommelse Nanda,
Buitelaar Jan K.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of child psychology and psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.652
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1469-7610
pISSN - 0021-9630
DOI - 10.1111/jcpp.12475
Subject(s) - heritability , psychology , attention deficit hyperactivity disorder , twin study , trait , cognition , population , quantitative trait locus , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , psychiatry , medicine , genetics , environmental health , computer science , biology , programming language
Background Although attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ( ADHD ) is thought to reflect a continuously distributed quantitative trait, it is assessed through binary diagnosis or skewed measures biased towards its high, symptomatic extreme. A growing trend is to study the positive tail of normally distributed traits, a promising avenue, for example, to study high intelligence to increase power for gene‐hunting for intelligence. However, the emergence of such a ‘positive genetics’ model has been tempered for ADHD due to poor phenotypic resolution at the low extreme. Overcoming this methodological limitation, we conduct the first study to assess the aetiologies of low extreme ADHD traits. Methods In a population‐representative sample of 2,143 twins, the Strength and Weaknesses of ADHD Symptoms and Normal behaviour ( SWAN ) questionnaire was used to assess ADHD traits on a continuum from low to high. Aetiological influences on extreme ADHD traits were estimated using DeFries–Fulker extremes analysis. ADHD traits were related to behavioural, cognitive and home environmental outcomes using regression. Results Low extreme ADHD traits were significantly influenced by shared environmental factors (23–35%) but were not significantly heritable. In contrast, high‐extreme ADHD traits showed significant heritability (39–51%) but no shared environmental influences. Compared to individuals with high extreme or with average levels of ADHD traits, individuals with low extreme ADHD traits showed fewer internalizing and externalizing behaviour problems, better cognitive performance and more positive behaviours and positive home environmental outcomes. Conclusions Shared environmental influences on low extreme ADHD traits may reflect passive gene‐environment correlation, which arises because parents provide environments as well as passing on genes. Studying the low extreme opens new avenues to study mechanisms underlying previously neglected positive behaviours. This is different from the current deficit‐based model of intervention, but congruent with a population‐level approach to improving youth wellbeing.

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