identical twin

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  • genetic factors ( in behaviour genetics: Methods of study )

    ...quasi-experimental methods are used to screen for genetic influence on individual differences in complex traits such as behaviour. The twin method relies on the accident of nature that results in identical (monozygotic, MZ) twins or fraternal (dizygotic, DZ) twins. MZ twins are like clones, genetically identical to each other because they came from the same fertilized egg. DZ twins, on the...

    in genetic disease, human: Cognitive and behavioral genetics )

    Some of the most powerful experiments to dissect the “nature versus nurture” aspects of human intelligence and behaviour have involved studies of twins, both monozygotic (identical) and dizygotic (fraternal). Cognitive or behavioral characteristics that are entirely under genetic control would be predicted to be the same, or concordant, in monozygotic twins, who share identical...

    in evolution: Measuring gene variability )

    ...being is genetically different from every other sex cell and, therefore, that no two persons who ever existed or will ever exist are likely to be genetically identical—with the exception of identical twins, which develop from a single fertilized ovum. The same conclusion applies to all organisms that reproduce sexually; every individual represents a unique genetic configuration that...

    in genetics, human: Identical twins )

    In a major nonfraternal type of twinning, only one egg is fertilized; but during the cleavage of this single zygote into two cells, the resulting pair somehow become separated. Each of the two cells may implant in the uterus separately and grow into a complete, whole individual. In laboratory studies with the zygotes of many animal species, it has been found that in the two-cell stage (and...

  • heritability of intelligence studies ( in intelligence, human: Heritability and malleability of intelligence )

    Among the most fruitful methods that have been used to assess the heritability of intelligence is the study of identical twins who were separated at an early age and reared apart. If the twins were raised in separate environments, and if it is assumed that when twins are separated they are randomly distributed across environments (often a dubious assumption), then the twins would have in common...

  • mental disorders ( in mental disorder: Genetics )

    ...patient, and higher rates of the illness in these relatives than expected indicate a possible genetic factor. In twin studies the frequency of occurrence of the illness in both members of pairs of identical (monozygous) twins is compared with its frequency in both members of a pair of fraternal (dizygous) twins. A higher concordance for disease among the identical than the fraternal twins...

  • twin types ( in multiple birth: Twins and twinning )

    The two major types of twins are identical twins and fraternal twins. Identical twins are two individuals that have developed from a single egg fertilized by a single sperm. This fertilized egg is called a zygote. At a relatively early stage in its growth, the zygote splits into two separate cell masses which go on to become embryos; these embryos are genetically identical to each other and are...

    in twin )

    either of two young who are simultaneously born from one mother. Twinning, common in many animals, is of two biological kinds: the one-egg (monozygotic), or identical, type and the two-egg (dizygotic), or fraternal, type. The latter type is more usual and can be thought of simply as a litter of two. In humans, psychological studies of sets of identical twins, since they are genetically...

Citations

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"identical twin." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 01 Dec. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/281878/identical-twin>.

APA Style:

identical twin. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved December 01, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/281878/identical-twin

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