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Environmental factors, such as attending religious ceremonies with family, affect individuals' religiousness as children, but genes most likely keep them attending and believing as they become adults, according to a study of twins by Laura Koenig of the Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education),  June, 2005  

Environmental factors, such as attending religious ceremonies with family, affect individuals' religiousness as children, but genes most likely keep them attending and believing as they become adults, according to a study of twins by Laura Koenig of the Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minne-apolis.

"The correlations suggest low genetic and high environmental influences when the twins [we studied] were young but a larger genetic influence as they age," reports Koenig.

COPYRIGHT 2005 Society for the Advancement of Education
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