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Harmonization of Neuroticism and Extraversion phenotypes across inventories and cohorts in the Genetics of Personality Consortium: an application of Item Response Theory. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mega-analytic studies in behavior genetics often face challenges in harmonizing different measures of personality traits, necessary for effective analysis.
  • This research, conducted by the Genetics of Personality Consortium, utilized Item-Response Theory (IRT) to align data from over 160,000 individuals across 23 cohorts assessing Neuroticism and Extraversion through nine different inventories.
  • The findings revealed that IRT successfully standardized measurements, confirmed heritability of these traits, and suggested that genetic influences show differences based on sex, highlighting the method's potential for enhancing statistical power in similar studies.

Article Abstract

Mega- or meta-analytic studies (e.g. genome-wide association studies) are increasingly used in behavior genetics. An issue in such studies is that phenotypes are often measured by different instruments across study cohorts, requiring harmonization of measures so that more powerful fixed effect meta-analyses can be employed. Within the Genetics of Personality Consortium, we demonstrate for two clinically relevant personality traits, Neuroticism and Extraversion, how Item-Response Theory (IRT) can be applied to map item data from different inventories to the same underlying constructs. Personality item data were analyzed in >160,000 individuals from 23 cohorts across Europe, USA and Australia in which Neuroticism and Extraversion were assessed by nine different personality inventories. Results showed that harmonization was very successful for most personality inventories and moderately successful for some. Neuroticism and Extraversion inventories were largely measurement invariant across cohorts, in particular when comparing cohorts from countries where the same language is spoken. The IRT-based scores for Neuroticism and Extraversion were heritable (48 and 49 %, respectively, based on a meta-analysis of six twin cohorts, total N = 29,496 and 29,501 twin pairs, respectively) with a significant part of the heritability due to non-additive genetic factors. For Extraversion, these genetic factors qualitatively differ across sexes. We showed that our IRT method can lead to a large increase in sample size and therefore statistical power. The IRT approach may be applied to any mega- or meta-analytic study in which item-based behavioral measures need to be harmonized.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4057636PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10519-014-9654-xDOI Listing

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