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Twins in Behavioral Science Research

Reviewed by Psychology Today Staff

The information gathered from the study of twins lays the groundwork for future genetic research, including the degree to which any aspects of life are determined by genetics, the location of specific genes, and the prevention and treatment of diseases and disorders. All of which makes them valuable to study.

Twins share everything from their in-utero environment and parents to birthdate and the classroom setting. One unusual case study involved two-and-a-half years old identical twins, one of whom nearly drowned in cold lake water. Researchers wondered whether he would suffer intellectual deficits. Later, the twins completed a number of tests that measured different skills. Surprisingly, meaningful cognitive differences between the two brothers were not found.

What Twins Research Tells Us
Irina Nedikova Shutterstock

There is much to celebrate in the research of twins. Even though many share environments before and after birth, no two twins are exactly the same. These conditions make every identical twin pair a mini-experiment. Close attention has been paid to identical twins reared apart by researchers such as Nancy Segal.

Who was the first to study twins?

In 1875, Sir Francis Galton, a half-cousin of Charles Darwin, published research in the UK publication Fraser’s Magazine. His article, “The History of Twins, As a Criterion of the Relative Powers of Nature and Nurture,” describes the study of twins and how nature and nurture affect development.

Can twins help us understand disease risk?

Briana Mezuk and colleagues recruited some 50 pairs of identical twins from the Mid-Atlantic Twin Registry, the largest such registry in the US. The researchers found that studying twins can tell us how stress and mental health contribute to the risk of diseases like type-2 diabetes. And at King’s College London, the study of twins has focused on the genetics of healthy aging, examining the risk of diseases that include cardiovascular, metabolic, musculoskeletal, and ophthalmologic disorders.

The Study of Twins
Photo Courtesy of E. Maran and C. Maran

Throughout the years, many researchers have been examining twins. Twin registries are found throughout the world, all following thousands of identical and fraternal twins. Registries can be found in the United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, and Finland, and the U.S. In this country alone, we have the National Academy of Sciences-National Research Council Twin Registry, the Minnesota Twin Registry, the Vietnam-Era Twin Registry, among many others.

What is the Newbauer study?

Psychoanalyst Peter Newbauer directed the separation of four sets of identical twins and one set of identical triplets, as part of a longitudinal research project conducted in the 1960s and 1970s, which was funded by the NIMH. Newbauer was an NYU psychiatry professor who also consulted with a Jewish adoption agency; they arranged to have the newborn babies assigned to deliberately different adoptive parents--affluent versus non-affluent. This study was reported in various publications, as well as the documentary, Three Identical Strangers.

What is the NASA Twins Study?

Astronaut Scott Kelly spent nearly a year in low-Earth orbit on the International Space Station in 2015-2016; meanwhile, his twin brother Mark, also an astronaut, stayed on Earth. Researchers wanted to see the effects of space travel in a genetically controlled situation. When compared with Mark, they found numerous changes in Scott such as bone density and altered telomeres—which protect the ends of chromosomes from the aging process. These changes, for the most part, returned to normal after his return to Earth.

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