Abstract
Reaction time (RT) data from the Minnesota Twin Study of Adult Development and Aging were used to investigate genetic and environmental influences on intraindividual variability in RT. The sample was 738 individuals (aged 27 to 95 years), including 185 monozygotic (MZ) and 131 disygotic (DZ) twin pairs. Two RT factors were created: decision time and movement time. Age-corrected heritability estimates were 40% for mean RT; 21% for intraindividual variability in movement time; and 0% for intraindividual variability in decision time. Multivariate analysis indicated that all genetic variance in the RT measures was shared among measures; environmental variance was specific to each RT measure.
Acknowledgments
The Minnesota Twin Study of Adult Development and Aging was supported by NIA grant AG06886. Analytical work was supported by a fellowship from the American Philosophical Society.
Notes
Note. ISD = intraindividual standard deviation; CV = coefficient of variance; SRT = simple reaction time; CRT = choice reaction time.
Note. Move = movement time factor; Deci = decision time factor.
Note. All correlations greater than .10 are significant at p < .01.
Note. A = additive genetic effects; C = shared environment effects; E = nonshared environment effects.
Note. βm = main effect of age on RT factor; βx = age moderation effect on A; βy = age moderation effect on C; and βz = age moderation effect on E.