This article addresses the autonomy hypothesis of vocabulary and grammar and bootstrapping mechanisms in early language development. Two birth cohorts of 1,505 and 1,049 same-sex twin pairs from the UK were assessed at 2 and 3 years on grammar and vocabulary, using adapted versions of the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory. Vocabulary and grammar correlate strongly at both 2 and 3 years in both cohorts. Multivariate genetic modeling reveals a consistently high genetic correlation between vocabulary and grammar at 2 and 3 years. This finding suggests the same genetic influences operate for both vocabulary and grammar, a finding incompatible with traditional autonomy hypothesis, at least in early acquisition. Crosslagged longitudinal genetic models indicate both lexical and syntactical bootstrapping operate from 2 to 3 years.
Environmental factors shared by co-twins affect BMI in childhood, but little evidence for their contribution was found in late adolescence. Our results suggest that genetic factors play a major role in the variation of BMI in adolescence among populations of different ethnicities exposed to different environmental factors related to obesity.
The present study of over 3000 2-year-old twin pairs used a sex-limitation model to examine genetic and environmental origins of sex differences in verbal and non-verbal cognitive ability. Girls scored significantly higher on both measures (p`0.0001), although gender only accounted for approximately 3% of the variance in verbal ability and 1% of the variance in non-verbal cognitive ability. For the verbal measure boys showed greater heritability than girls. Also the twin-pair correlation is significantly lower for opposite-sex twins than for non-identical same-sex twins. This indicates that individual differences in verbal ability include some sex-specific factors. Non-verbal cognitive ability did not differ in aetiology for boys and girls. We conclude that genetic and environmental influences differ for girls and boys for early verbal but not non-verbal development.
Poor sleep consolidation during the first 2 years of life may be a risk factor for language learning, whereas good sleep consolidation may foster language learning through successive genetic and environmental influences.
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