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Volumn 135, Issue 13, 2000, Pages 64-66
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The nature of nurturing. A new study finds that how parents treat a child can shape which of his genes turn on.
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NONE
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ADOLESCENT;
ANIMAL;
ARTICLE;
BEHAVIOR GENETICS;
CHILD;
CHILD BEHAVIOR;
CHILD DEVELOPMENT;
CHILD PARENT RELATION;
CHILD REARING;
EGO DEVELOPMENT;
ENVIRONMENT;
FEMALE;
GENETICS;
HUMAN;
INFANT;
MALE;
MONOZYGOTIC TWINS;
MOTHER CHILD RELATION;
NEWBORN;
RAT;
TEMPERAMENT;
ADOLESCENT;
ANIMALS;
CHILD;
CHILD BEHAVIOR;
CHILD DEVELOPMENT;
CHILD REARING;
ENVIRONMENT;
FEMALE;
GENETICS;
GENETICS, BEHAVIORAL;
HUMANS;
INFANT;
INFANT, NEWBORN;
MALE;
MOTHER-CHILD RELATIONS;
PARENT-CHILD RELATIONS;
PARENTING;
PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT;
RATS;
TEMPERAMENT;
TWINS, MONOZYGOTIC;
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EID: 0034719574
PISSN: 00289604
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (5)
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References (0)
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