Abstract
Transmission of six spatial tests, Card Rotations, Cube Comparisons, Group Embedded Figures, Hidden Patterns, Mental Rotations, and portable Rod and Frame, is examined among 73 members in four generations of an extended kindred. Nonadditive genetic variance is substantial for one of the six tests, Card Rotations. Whether this nonadditive genetic variance is due to a major autosomal gene is equivocal based on results from segregation and linkage analysis. There is no evidence for genetic variance for Mental Rotations or Hidden Patterns, in contrast to previous findings suggesting major gene involvement (Ashtonet al., 1979). If spatial ability is due, in part, to an autosomal major gene, the gene has variable expression (reflected in different tests) or genetic heterogeneity is pronounced.
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant HD-05615.
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Smalley, S.L., Thompson, A.L., Spence, M.A. et al. Genetic influences on spatial ability: Transmission in an extended kindred. Behav Genet 19, 229–240 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01065907
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01065907