“…The familial model suggests that ACEs do not exert a direct environmentally mediated effect on antisocial behavior and victimization, but rather are explained by unmeasured familial factors that correlate with both ACEs and adverse behavioral outcomes. This model is largely based on an extensive line of quantitative behavioral genetic research showing that differential exposure to early-life events, such as ACEs, are partly heritable (Pezzoli, Antfolk, Hatoum, & Santtila, 2018) and that a substantial amount of the covariance between parenting, household conditions, and child behavior are accounted by common genetic influences (Cleveland, Wiebe, Van Den Oord, & Rowe, 2000; Jaffee & Price, 2007; Neiderhiser, Reiss, Hetherington, & Plomin, 1999), creating a phenomenon known as gene–environment correlation (Scarr & McCartney, 1983). This may not come as much of a surprise given that parents create household environments and relationships with their children based on their emotional and behavioral propensities, which they also pass down to their children via biological/genetic transmission and reinforce through socialization.…”