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2. SEEDS OF SIN

    1.
60 Minutes: Murder Gene: Man on Death Row Bases Appeal on the Belief That His Criminal Tendencies Are Inherited
(2001). CBS television, February 27.

    2.
It is thought that this “malfunction” or spontaneous event of identical twinning occurs when a blastocyst collapses and splits the progenitor cells in two, with the same genetic material in both sides of the embryo, resulting in the development of two identical embryos.

    3.
Baker, L. A., Barton, M. & Raine, A. (2002). The Southern California Twin Register at the University of Southern California.
Twin Research
5, 456–59.

    4.
Baker, L. A., Jacobsen, K., Raine, A., Lozano, D. I. & Bezdjian, S. (2007). Genetic and environmental bases of childhood antisocial behavior: A multi-informant twin study.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology
116, 219–35.

    5.
Ibid.

    6.
The heritability of 98 percent that we obtain from our twin study is very high, and might be applying to children who are seen to be antisocial by all informants of their behavior. In contrast, other children may be antisocial, but their parents and teachers are not aware of their antisocial behavior.

    7.
Baker, L., Raine, A., Liu, J. & Jacobsen, K. C. (2008). Genetic and environmental influences on reactive and proactive aggression in children.
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
36, 1265–78.

    8.
Burt, S. A. (2009). Are there meaningful etiological differences within antisocial behavior? Results of a meta-analysis.
Clinical Psychology Review
29, 163–78.

    9.
Arseneault, L., Moffitt, T. E., Caspi, A., Taylor, A., Rijsdijk, F. V., et al. (2003). Strong genetic effects on cross-situational antisocial behaviour among 5-year-old children according to mothers, teachers, examiner-observers, and twins’ self-reports.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
44, 832–48.

  10.
Viding E., Jones, A. P., Frick, P. J., Moffitt, T. E. & Plomin, R. (2008). Heritability of antisocial behaviour at 9: Do callous-unemotional traits matter?
Developmental Science
11, 17–22.

  11.
Grove, W. M., Eckert, E. D., Heston, L., Bouchard, T. J., Segal, N., et al. (1990). Heritability of substance abuse and antisocial behavior: A study of monozygotic twins reared apart.
Biological Psychiatry
27, 1293–1304.

  12.
Christiansen, K. O. (1977). A review of criminality among twins. In S. A. Mednick and K. O. Christiansen (eds.),
Biosocial Bases of Criminal Behavior
, pp. 45–88. New York: Gardner Press.

  13.
Schwesinger, G. (1952). The effect of differential parent-child relations on identical twin resemblance in personality.
Acta Geneticae Medicae et Germellologiae
. Cited in ibid.

  14.
Grove, et al. Heritability of substance abuse and antisocial behavior.

  15.
Baker, et al. Genetic and environmental bases of childhood antisocial behavior.

  16.
Moffitt T. E. (2005). The new look of behavioral genetics in developmental psychopathology: Gene-environment interplay in antisocial behaviors.
Psychological Bulletin
131, 533–54.

  17.
Bouchard, T. J. & McGue, M. (2003). Genetic and environmental influences on human psychological differences.
Journal of Neurobiology
54, 4–45.

  18.
Mednick, S. A., Gabrielli, W. H. & Hutchings, B. (1984). Genetic influences in criminal convictions: Evidence from an adoption cohort.
Science
224, 891–94.

  19.
Raine, A. (1993).
The Psychopathology of Crime: Criminal Behavior as a Clinical Disorder
. San Diego: Academic Press.

  20.
Moffitt, T. E., Ross, S. & Raine, A. (2011). Crime and biology. In J. Q. Wilson and J. Petersilia (eds.),
Crime and Public Policy
, 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  21.
Ibid.

  22.
Ibid.

  23.
Ibid.

  24.
In contrast to twin studies, several adoption studies have not shown heritability for violence. One explanation is that adoption studies rely on convictions for violence as their measure, yet conviction data is a notoriously poor measure, as most people who are violent are never even arrested, let alone convicted. In contrast, twin studies have relied more on laboratory, parent, teacher, child, and adult ratings of aggressive and violent behavior, which assess
degree
of aggression and hence have a much broader, more reliable, and more systematic radar screen compared with conviction data, which offers a much simpler yes/no dichotomy.

  25.
Jacobs, P. A., Brunton, M., Melville, M. M., Brittain, R. P. & McClemont, W. F. (1965). Aggressive behavior, mental sub-normality, and the XYY male.
Nature
208, 1351–52.

  26.
Voorhees, J. J., Wilkins, J., Hayes, E. & Harrell, E. R. (1970). Nodulocystic acne as a phenotypic feature of the XYY genotype.
Archives of Dermatology
105, 913–19.

  27.
Lyons, R. D. (1968). Ultimate Speck appeal may cite a genetic defect.
New York Times
, April 22, p. 43.
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20C10FA355D147493C0AB178FD85F4C8685F9
.

  28.
Telfer, M. A, Baker, D., Clark, G. R. & Richardson, C. E. (1968). Incidence
of gross chromosomal errors among tall criminal American males.
Science
159, 1249–50.

  29.
Davis, R. J., McGee, B. J., Empson, J. & Engel, E. (1970). XYY and crime.
Lancet
296, 1086.

  30.
Witkin, H. A., Mednick, S. A., Schulsinger, F. et al. (1976). Criminality in XYY and XXY men.
Science
193, 547–55.

  31.
Ibid.

  32.
Ross, J. L., Roeltgen, D. P., Kushner, H., Zinn, A. R., Reiss, A., et al. (2012). Behavioral and social phenotypes in boys with 47, XYY syndrome or 47, XXY Klinefelter syndrome.
Pediatrics
129, 769–78.

  33.
Brunner, H. (2011). Do the genes tell it all? Invited address, Congress on
Crime and Punishment: A Case of Biology
, Organization for Biology, Bio-Medical Sciences and Psychobiology, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, January 19.

  34.
Brunner, H. G. (2011). Personal communication, Amsterdam, January 19.

  35.
Brunner, H. G., Nelen, M., Breakfield, X. O., Ropers, H. H. & van Oost, B. A. (1993). Abnormal behavior associated with a point mutation in the structural gene for monoamine oxidase A.
Science
262, 578–80.

  36.
Ibid.

  37.
Farrington, D. P. (2000). Psychosocial predictors of adult antisocial personality and adult convictions.
Behavioral Sciences & the Law
18, 605–22.

  38.
Brunner, H. (1996). MAOA deficiency and abnormal behaviour: Perspectives on an association.
Ciba Foundation Symposium
194, 155–64.

  39.
Cases, O., Seif, I., Grimsby, J., Gaspar, P., Chen, K., et al. (1995). Aggressive behavior and altered amounts of brain serotonin and norepinephrine in mice lacking MAOA.
Science
268, 1763–66.

  40.
Caspi, A., McClay, J., Moffitt, T., Mill, J., Martin, J., et al. (2002). Role of genotype in the cycle of violence in maltreated children.
Science
297, 851–54.

  41.
Kim-Cohen, J., Caspi, A., Taylor, A., Williams, B., Newcombe, R., et al. (2006). MAOA, maltreatment, and gene-environment interaction predicting children’s mental health: New evidence and a meta-analysis.
Molecular Psychiatry
11, 903–13.

  42.
Beach, S.R.H., Brody, G. H., Gunter, T. D., Packer, H., Wernett, P., et al. (2010). Child maltreatment moderates the association of MAOA with symptoms of depression and antisocial personality disorder.
Journal of Family Psychology
24, 12–20.

  43.
Williams, L. M., Gatt, J. M., Kuan, S. A., Dobson-Stone, C., Palmer, D. M., et al. (2009). A polymorphism of the MAOA gene is associated with emotional brain markers and personality traits on an antisocial index.
Neuropsychopharmacology
34, 1797–1809.

  44.
Eisenberger, N. I., Way, B. M., Taylor, S. E., Welch, W. T. & Lieberman, M. D. (2007). Understanding genetic risk for aggression: Clues from the brain’s response to social exclusion.
Biological Psychiatry
61, 100–108.

  45.
Guo, G., Ou, X. M., Roettger, M. & Shih, J. C. (2008). The VNTR 2 repeat in MAOA and delinquent behavior in adolescence and young adulthood: Associations and MAOA promoter activity.
European Journal of Human Genetics
16, 626–34.

  46.
McDermott, R., Tingley, D., Cowden, J., Frazzetto, G. & Johnson, D.D.P. (2009). Monoamine oxidase A gene (MAOA) predicts behavioral aggression following provocation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA
106, 2118–23.

  47.
The important caveat that has to be borne in mind in interpreting the link between the low MAOA gene and antisocial behavior is that it accounts for only a small proportion of the variance. This is also true of most genes that have been linked to personality or mental illnesses.

  48.
Maori violence blamed on gene (2006).
The Dominion Post
(Wellington, New Zealand), August 9, Section A3.

  49.
Lea, R. & Chambers, G. (2007). Monoamine oxidase, addiction, and the “warrior” gene hypothesis.
New Zealand Medical Journal
120, U2441.

  50.
Gibbons, A. (2004). American Association of Physical Anthropologists meeting. Tracking the evolutionary history of a “warrior” gene.
Science
304, 818.

  51.
Newman, T. K., Syagailo, Y. V., Barr, C. S., et al. (2005). Monoamine oxidase A gene promoter variation and rearing experience influences aggressive behavior in rhesus monkeys.
Biological Psychiatry
57, 167–72.

  52.
Lea & Chambers, Monoamine oxidase, addiction, and the “warrior” gene hypothesis.

  53.
Merriman, T. & Cameron, V. (2007). Risk-taking: Behind the warrior gene story.
New Zealand Medical Journal
120, U2440.

  54.
Crampton, P. & Parkin, C. (2007). Warrior genes and risk-taking science.
New Zealand Medical Journal
120, U2439.

  55.
Lea & Chambers, Monoamine oxidase, addiction, and the “warrior” gene hypothesis.

  56.
United Nations (2006). Intentional homicide, rate per 100,000 population. Office on Drugs and Crime,
http://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/IHS-rates-05012009.pdf
.

  57.
Brunner, et al. Abnormal behavior associated with a point mutation in the structural gene for monoamine oxidase A.

  58.
Eisenberger et al., Understanding genetic risk for aggression.

  59.
It should be noted that the MAOA–antisocial relationship has not been found in all cultures. Shih and colleagues did not observe such a relationship
with either antisocial personality disorder or antisocial alcoholism in participants from Taiwan: see Lu, R. B., Lin, W. W., Lee, J. F., Ko, H. C. & Shih, J. C. (2003). Neither antisocial personality disorder nor antisocial alcoholism is associated with the MAO-A gene in Han Chinese males.
Alcoholism-Clinical and Experimental Research
27(6), 889–93. Furthermore, the interaction between abuse and low MAOA has not been found in African-Americans in one report: see Widom, C. S. & Brzustowicz, L. M. (2006). MAOA and the “Cycle of violence”: Childhood abuse and neglect, MAOA genotype, and risk for violent and antisocial behavior.
Biological Psychiatry
60, 684–89.

  60.
Williams, et al., A polymorphism of the MAOA gene is associated with emotional brain markers.

  61.
Cadoret, R. J., Langbehn, D., Caspers, K., Troughton, E. P., Yucuis, R., et al. (2003). Associations of the serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism with aggressivity, attention deficit, and conduct disorder in an adoptee population.
Comprehensive Psychiatry
44, 88–101.

  62.
DeLisi, M., Beaver, K. M., Vaughn, M. G. & Wright, J. P. (2009). All in the family: Gene x environment interaction between DRD2 and criminal father is associated with five antisocial phenotypes.
Criminal Justice and Behavior
36, 1187–97.

  63.
Lee, S. S., Lahey, B. B., Waldman, I., Van Hulle, C. A., Rathouz, P., et al. (2007). Association of dopamine transporter genotype with disruptive behavior disorders in an eight-year longitudinal study of children and adolescents.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B-Neuropsychiatric Genetics
144B, 310–17.

  64.
Gadow, K. D., DeVincent, C. J., Olvet, D. M., Pisarevskaya, V. & Hatchwell, E. (2010). Association of DRD4 polymorphism with severity of oppositional defiant disorder, separation anxiety disorder and repetitive behaviors in children with autism spectrum disorder.
European Journal of Neuroscience
32, 1058–65.

  65.
Couppis, M. H. & Kennedy, C. H. (2008). The rewarding effect of aggression is reduced by nucleus accumbens dopamine receptor antagonism in mice.
Psychopharmacology
197, 449–56.

  66.
Sokolov, B. P. & Cadet, J. L. (2006). Methamphetamine causes alterations in the MAP kinase-related pathways in the brains of mice that display increased aggressiveness.
Neuropsychopharmacology
31, 956–66.

  67.
Caspi, A., Hariri, A. R., Holmes, A., Uher, R. & Moffitt, T. E. (2010). Genetic sensitivity to the environment: The case of the serotonin transporter gene and its implications for studying complex diseases and traits.
American Journal of Psychiatry
167, 509–27.

  68.
Gelernter, J., Kranzler, H. R. & Cubells, J. F. (1997). Serotonin transporter
protein (SLC6A4) allele and haplotype frequencies and linkage disequilibria in African- and European-American and Japanese populations and in alcohol-dependent subjects.
Human Genetics
101, 243–46.

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