Early life course processes leading to educational and economic attainment in young adulthood: Contributions of early socioeconomic adversity and education polygenic score

Citation

Wickrama, K. A. S.; OˋNeal, C. W.; Lee, T. K.; & Lee, S. (2021). Early life course processes leading to educational and economic attainment in young adulthood: Contributions of early socioeconomic adversity and education polygenic score. PLoS One. vol. 16 (10) , PMCID: PMC8504765

Abstract

The present study investigated an integrated life course model, drawn from the life course theoretical perspective, to elucidate youth's additive, cascading, and cumulative life course processes stemming from early socioeconomic adversity and education polygenic score (education PGS) as well as potential interactions between them (GxE), which contribute to subsequent young adult socioeconomic outcomes. Additionally, the independent, varying associations among social and genetic predictors, life-stage specific educational outcomes (educational achievement in adolescence and educational attainment, in later stages), and young adult economic outcomes were examined. The study used prospective, longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health (Add Health) with a sample of 5,728 youth of European ancestry. Early family socioeconomic adversity and individual education PGS were associated with life stage-specific educational outcomes through additive and cascading processes linked to young adults' economic outcomes (personal earnings) through a cumulative process. A GxE moderation existed between individuals' education PGS and early socioeconomic adversity at multiple life stages, explaining variation in adolescent educational outcomes. Both early socioeconomic adversity and education PGS were persistently associated with youth's educational and economic outcomes throughout the early life course. In sum, the findings based on the integrated life course model showed how additive, cascading, and cumulative processes were related and conditioned one another, generating specific life course patterns and outcomes. The findings highlight the value of incorporating molecular genetic information into longitudinal developmental life course research and provide insight into malleable characteristics and appropriate timing for interventions addressing youth developmental characteristics.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256967

Keyword(s)

educational attainment

Notes

1932-6203

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

PLoS One

Author(s)

Wickrama, K. A. S.
OˋNeal, C. W.
Lee, T. K.
Lee, S.

Year Published

2021

Volume Number

16

Issue Number

10

Edition

October 12

ISSN/ISBN

1932-6203

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0256967

PMCID

PMC8504765

Reference ID

9462