• Title of article

    The genetic and environmental relationship between the interpersonal sensitivity measure (IPSM) and the personality dimensions of Eysenck and Cloninger

  • Author/Authors

    Nathan A. Gillespie، نويسنده , , Stuart J. Johnstone، نويسنده , , Philip Boyce، نويسنده , , Andrew C. Heath، نويسنده , , Nicholas G. Martin، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1039
  • To page
    1051
  • Abstract
    A shortened version of the Interpersonal Sensitivity Measure (IPSM) developed to predict depression prone personalities was administered in a self-report questionnaire to a community-based sample of 3269 Australian twin pairs aged 18–28 years, along with Eysenckʹs EPQ and Cloningerʹs TPQ. The IPSM included four sub-scales: Separation Anxiety (SEP); Interpersonal Sensitivity (INT); Fragile Inner-Self (FIS); and Timidity (TIM). Univariate analysis revealed that individual differences in the IPSM sub-scale scores were best explained by additive genetic and specific environmental effects. Confirming previous research findings, familial aggregation for the EPQ and TPQ personality dimensions was entirely due to additive genetic effects. In the multivariate case, a model comprising additive genetic and specific environmental effects best explained the covariation between the latent factors for male and female twin pairs alike. The EPQ and TPQ dimensions accounted for moderate to large proportions of the genetic variance (40–76%) in the IPSM sub-scales, while most of the non-shared environment variance was unique to the IPSM sub-scales.
  • Keywords
    depression , Personality , genes , twins
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Record number

    456876