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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Jun 18.
Published in final edited form as: J Fam Psychol. 2009 Oct;23(5):646–660. doi: 10.1037/a0016091

Table 3.

Contributions of parents' personality to covariance between reported marital quality and parents' negativity and warmth.

Covariance between reported marital conflict and parent negativity

Portion of covariance explained by latent genetic and nonshared environmental factors related to personality Portion of covariance independent of personality Total Covariance

amed emed rmed ares eres rres rtot
Personality characteristics: anxiety, aggression, sociability .08 .07 .15 .06 .15 .21 .36
Covariance between reported marital warmth and parent warmth

Portion of covariance explained by latent genetic and nonshared environmental factors related to personality Portion of covariance independent of personality Total Covariance

amed emed rmed amed emed rmed amed
Personality characteristics: anxiety, sociability .03 .03 .06 .03 .09 .12 .18

Legend: “rtot”denotes the total association between marital quality and parenting, while “rmed” describes the portion of this association that is explained by the twins' personality characteristics. Similarly “amed” and “emed” respectively describe the portion of rmed that is explained by genetic and nonshared environmental factors. “rres” is the portion of the association between marital quality and parenting that is independent of the twins' personal characteristics. “ares” and “eres” respectively describe genetic and environment contributions to rres.