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. 2025 Aug 13;20(8):e0327729. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0327729

Fig 7. Component E captures the values and opportunities of those leading wealthy lifestyles.

Fig 7

Manhattan plot shows phenotypes, colored by category, whose weight strength in component A rank in the 95th percentile among all 100 components. Weight strength is calculated as the magnitude of Pearson’s correlation coefficient between participant data variable and latent variable scores. Driving Socioeconomic phenotypes include proportion of European ancestry, neighborhoods high in terms of overall child opportunity, school wealth, and a low percentage of students eligible for free lunches. Other strongly weighted phenotypes relate to good performance on tasks measuring working memory and visuospatial processing and attention, lack of Mexican American cultural values, good grades in school, parent financial responsibility, White ethnicity, married parents, low screen time, and involvement in extracurricular activities such as playing sports and musical instruments. This component illuminates a link between opportunity, lifestyle, and sociodemographic group.