Pathways between a polygenic index for education and years of completed schooling: the presentation of self and assessment of others

Citation

Boardman, J. D.; Harris, K. M.; & Finch, B. K. (2024). Pathways between a polygenic index for education and years of completed schooling: the presentation of self and assessment of others. Biodemography Soc Biol. pp. 1-8

Abstract

Polygenic scores (PGS) are broadly misconstrued as reflecting direct causal genetic effects on their respective phenotypes. While this assumption might be accurate for some anthropometric traits like height, more complex traits such as educational attainment show very large indirect effects that stem from many sources. One unexplored source of confounding is the possibility of evocative gene-environment correlation (rGE). Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, we examine the relationship between interviewer assessments of respondent appearance as a function of education PGS. We show a bivariate association between educational PGS and 1) perceived grooming, 2) physical attractiveness, and 3) personality. We then regress years of education on the educational PGS and show that very little of the association (~1-2%) is mediated by attractiveness or personality but 7.5% of the baseline association is confounded with how others may perceive grooming. These results highlight the importance of social-behavioral mechanisms that may link specific genotypes to successful transitions through high school and college and continue to bridge research from the social and biological sciences.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1080/19485565.2024.2355891

Keyword(s)

polygenic

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Biodemography Soc Biol

Author(s)

Boardman, J. D.
Harris, K. M.
Finch, B. K.

Year Published

2024

Pages

1-8

Edition

2024/06/03

ISSN/ISBN

1948-5565

DOI

10.1080/19485565.2024.2355891

Reference ID

10421