Residence United States Notable students Nick Martin Fields Behavioural genetics | Name Lindon Eaves Doctoral advisor John L. Jinks | |
Born 23 September 1944 (age 79)
Walsall, Staffordshire, England ( 1944-09-23 ) Institutions Virginia Commonwealth University Doctoral students Andrew C. Heath, Nick Martin Known for Development of field of behavioral genetics, statistical modeling, genetical theory, genetics of personality and social attitudes Influences Ronald Fisher, Hans Eysenck Institution Virginia Commonwealth University Alma mater University of Birmingham, Ripon College Cuddesdon, Oxford Influenced by Ronald Fisher, Hans Eysenck |
Lindon eaves festschrift part 1 4
Lindon J. Eaves (born 23 September 1944) is a behavior geneticist who has published on topics as diverse as the heritability of religion and psychopathology. His research encompasses the development of mathematical models reflecting competing theories of the causes and familial transmission of human human differences, the design of studies for the resolution, analytical methods for parameter estimation and hypothesis-testing and application to substantive questions about specific (human) traits. He was the first to consider standardized variance components for heritability estimates and was the first (at least in the human context) to consider the effects of living with a relative (with a different genotype or, in the case of monozygotic twins, the same genotype) on the behavior of a person. Furthermore, he was the first to think about genotype x age interaction and set up the algebra to study the effects of genes working in males as well as females, making it possible to use twins pairs of opposite-sex (dizygotic opposite sex). Together with Nick Martin, he wrote many classical papers, one of which is "The genetic analysis of covariance structure". They also wrote the book, Genes, culture and personality: An empirical approach. In 2012, a Festschrift was held in Edinburgh dedicated to Eaves' work; the proceedings were subsequently published in Behavior Genetics.
Contents
Lindon eaves festschrift part 3 4
Early life
Eaves studied genetics at the University of Birmingham and theology at the University of Oxford. He was professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Oxford until 1981, when he moved to Virginia Commonwealth University where Walter Nance and Linda Corey had established the Virginia Twin Registry. In 1996, he and Kenneth Kendler founded the Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, where he is currently professor emeritus and actively engaged in research and training.