ehaviors related to self-regulation, such as substance use disorders or antisocial behaviors, have far-reaching consequences for affected individuals, their families, communities and society at large 1,2 . Collectively, this group of correlated traits are classified as externalizing 3 . Twin studies have demonstrated that externalizing liability is highly heritable (~80%) 4,5 . To date, however, no large-scale molecular genetic studies have utilized the extensive degree of genetic overlap among externalizing traits to aid gene discovery, as most studies have focused on individual disorders 6 . For many high-cost, high-risk behaviors with an externalizing component-opioid use disorder and suicide attempts 7 being salient examples-there are limited genotyped cases available for gene discovery 8,9 .A complementary strategy to the single-disease approach is to study the shared genetic architecture across traits in multivariate analyses, which boosts statistical power by pooling data across
The Broad Antisocial Behavior Consortium entails the largest collaboration to date on the genetic architecture of ASB, and the first results suggest that ASB may be highly polygenic and has potential heterogeneous genetic effects across sex.
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