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Emotion and its management: the lens of language and social psychology
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Assessing communication behaviours of hospital pharmacists: how well do the perspectives of pharmacists, patients, and an independent observer align?
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Kelly, meet Craik: a role for mental models in personal construct psychology
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Playback: An investigation of the discursive implications and the pragmatic functions of repetition in traditional Chinese medical consultations
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Interactional adjustment: three approaches in language and social psychology
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“When birds of a different feather flock together” – intercultural socialization in adolescents’ friendships
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The role of perceived cultural distance, personal growth initiative, language proficiencies, and tridimensional acculturation orientations for psychological adjustment among international students
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Norm talk and human cooperation: Can we talk ourselves into cooperation?
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Commentary regarding Wilson et al. (2018) “Effectiveness of ‘Self-Compassion’ Related Therapies: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.” All Is Not as It Seems
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We feel better when we speak common language; affective well-being in bilingual adolescents from three ethnic groups in Indonesia
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Imprint of assortative mating on the human genome
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Yengo, Loic; Robinson, Matthew R.; Keller, Matthew C.; Kemper, Kathryn E.; Yang, Yuanhao; Trzaskowski, Maciej; Gratten, Jacob; Turley, Patrick; Cesarini, David; Benjamin, Daniel J.; Wray, Naomi R.; Goddard, Michael E.; Yang, Jian; Visscher, Peter M.. - : Nature Publishing Group, 2018
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Abstract:
Preference for mates with similar phenotypes; that is, assortative mating, is widely observed in humans and has evolutionary consequences. Under Fisher's classical theory, assortative mating is predicted to induce a signature in the genome at trait-associated loci that can be detected and quantified. Here, we develop and apply a method to quantify assortative mating on a specific trait by estimating the correlation (θ) between genetic predictors of the trait from single nucleotide polymorphisms on odd- versus even-numbered chromosomes. We show by theory and simulation that the effect of assortative mating can be quantified in the presence of population stratification. We applied this approach to 32 complex traits and diseases using single nucleotide polymorphism data from ~400,000 unrelated individuals of European ancestry. We found significant evidence of assortative mating for height (θ = 3.2%) and educational attainment (θ = 2.7%), both of which were consistent with theoretical predictions. Overall, our results imply that assortative mating involves multiple traits and affects the genomic architecture of loci that are associated with these traits, and that the consequence of mate choice can be detected from a random sample of genomes.
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Keyword:
2802 Behavioral Neuroscience; 3205 Experimental and Cognitive Psychology; 3207 Social Psychology; Common; Genotype; Height; Loci; Size; Twins; Wide Association
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:3579f6b
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Arab-Levantine personality structure: a psycholexical study of modern standard Arabic in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and the West Bank
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Tools of engagement: selecting a next speaker in Australian Aboriginal multiparty conversations
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Getting to know you: teasing as an invitation to intimacy in initial interactions
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Personality and behavior prediction and consistency across cultures: a multimethod study of blacks and whites in South Africa
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