• Title of article

    On the consequences of ignoring genetic influences in criminological research

  • Author/Authors

    Barnes، نويسنده , , J.C. and Boutwell، نويسنده , , Brian B. and Beaver، نويسنده , , Kevin M. and Gibson، نويسنده , , Chris L. and Wright، نويسنده , , John P.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    471
  • To page
    482
  • Abstract
    AbstractPurpose riminological scholars explore the social causes of crime while giving little consideration to the possibility that genetic factors underlie the observed associations. Indeed, the standard social science method (SSSM) assumes genetic influences do not confound the association between X and Y. Yet, a nascent stream of evidence has questioned the validity of this approach by revealing many criminological variables are at least partially affected by genetic influences. As a result, a substantial proportion of the literature may be misspecified due to uncontrolled genetic factors. No effort has been made to directly estimate the extent to which genetic confounding has biased the associations presented in criminological studies. s esent study seeks to address this issue by drawing on simulated datasets. s/Conclusions s suggest genetic confounding may account for a negligible portion of the relationship between X and Y when their correlation (ryx) is larger than the correlation between genetic factors and Y (i.e., ryx > ryg). Genetic confounding appears to be much more problematic when the correlation between X and Y is in the moderate-to-small range (e.g., ryx = .20) and the genetic effect is in the moderate-to-large range (e.g., ryg ≥ .30).
  • Journal title
    Journal of Criminal Justice
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Journal of Criminal Justice
  • Record number

    1707792