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Original Articles

Integrating Social Science and Genetics: News from the Political Front

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Pages 67-87 | Published online: 16 May 2011
 

Abstract

There has been growing interest in the use of genetic models to expand the understanding of political preferences, attitudes, and behaviors. Researchers in the social sciences have begun incorporating these models and have revealed that genetic differences account for individual differences in political beliefs, behaviors, and responses to the political environment. The first Integrating Genetics and the Social Sciences Conference, held at Boulder, Colorado in May of 2010, brought together these researchers. As a result, we jointly review the last 5 years of research in this area. In doing so, we explicate the methods, findings, and limitations of behavior genetic approaches, including twin designs, association studies, and genome-wide analyses, in their application toward exploring political preferences.

Notes

1If unaccounted subpopulations exist within the studies defined groups and if they differed in both allele frequencies, ignoring these differences in a candidate gene studies would lead to confounding.

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