1983
DOI: 10.2307/1129703
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How People Make Their Own Environments: A Theory of Genotype --> Environment Effects

Abstract: We propose a theory of development in which experience is directed by genotypes. Genotypic differences are proposed to affect phenotypic differences, both directly and through experience, via 3 kinds of genotype leads to environment effects: a passive kind, through environments provided by biologically related parents; an evocative kind, through responses elicited by individuals from others; and an active kind, through the selection of different environments by different people. The theory adapts the 3 kinds o… Show more

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Cited by 814 publications
(1,144 citation statements)
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“…Taken as a whole, these findings lend insight into the means by which phenotypic differences emerge from the interaction between individual genotypes and individually-experienced environments, theorized decades ago as the means by which children 'make their own environments' 7 via developmental successions of reliable and repeated couplings between organism and environment 29 . Similar notions have been advanced in phenotypic studies contrasting the experiential development of children with autism and their typically-developing peers 30 , yet never heretofore demonstrated as having directly traceable genetic influence.…”
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confidence: 73%
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“…Taken as a whole, these findings lend insight into the means by which phenotypic differences emerge from the interaction between individual genotypes and individually-experienced environments, theorized decades ago as the means by which children 'make their own environments' 7 via developmental successions of reliable and repeated couplings between organism and environment 29 . Similar notions have been advanced in phenotypic studies contrasting the experiential development of children with autism and their typically-developing peers 30 , yet never heretofore demonstrated as having directly traceable genetic influence.…”
mentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Moreover, the measures that are most highly heritable, preferential attention to eye and mouth regions of the face, are also those that are differentially diminished in children with autism ( Χ 2 =64.03, P <0.0001). These results—which implicate social visual engagement as a neurodevelopmental endophenotype—not only for autism, but for population-wide variation in social-information-seeking 8 —reveal a means of human biological niche construction, with phenotypic differences emerging from the interaction of individual genotypes with early life experience 7 . …”
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confidence: 81%
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