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      The Project Talent Twin and Sibling Study: Zygosity and New Data Collection

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          Abstract

          The Project Talent Twin and Sibling (PTTS) study includes 4481 multiples and their 522 nontwin siblings from 2233 families. The sample was drawn from Project Talent, a U.S. national longitudinal study of 377,000 individuals born 1942–1946, first assessed in 1960 and representative of U.S. students in secondary school (Grades 9–12). In addition to the twins and triplets, the 1960 dataset includes 84,000 siblings from 40,000 other families. This design is both genetically informative and unique in facilitating separation of the ‘common’ environment into three sources of variation: shared by all siblings within a family, specific to twin-pairs, and associated with school/community-level factors. We term this the GIFTS model for genetics, individual, family, twin, and school sources of variance. In our article published in a previous Twin Research and Human Genetics special issue, we described data collections conducted with the full Project Talent sample during 1960–1974, methods for the recent linking of siblings within families, identification of twins, and the design of a 54-year follow-up of the PTTS sample, when participants were 68–72 years old. In the current article, we summarize participation and data available from this 2014 collection, describe our method for assigning zygosity using survey responses and yearbook photographs, illustrate the GIFTS model applied to 1960 vocabulary scores from more than 80,000 adolescent twins, siblings and schoolmates and summarize the next wave of PTTS data collection being conducted as part of the larger Project Talent Aging Study.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101244624
          32375
          Twin Res Hum Genet
          Twin Res Hum Genet
          Twin research and human genetics : the official journal of the International Society for Twin Studies
          1832-4274
          17 March 2020
          December 2019
          01 December 2020
          : 22
          : 6
          : 769-778
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Psychology, Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
          [2 ]Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
          [3 ]Department of Psychology, Crean College of Health and Behavioral Sciences, Chapman University, Orange, CA, USA
          Author notes
          Author for correspondence: Carol A. Prescott, cprescot@ 123456usc.edu
          Article
          PMC7179982 PMC7179982 7179982 nihpa1575795
          10.1017/thg.2019.117
          7179982
          32043952
          306da412-a00b-4dbc-9895-357b749bd5b7

          Data. Access to the 1960 PT data is available through Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research at https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACDA/studies/33341. Data, documentation and copies of measures for the 1960 PT, 1-, 5- and 11-year follow-up studies, and 2014 PTTS data collection are available from AIR through a restricted data use agreement. For more information, contact AIR at ProjectTalentSTudy@ 123456air.org or 1-866-770-6077.

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          Article

          aging,school effects,environment,family,intellectual ability,Cognition

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