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Recent family, twin and adoption studies of psychiatric illness have often used “super-normal” control groups, from which individuals are excluded if they demonstrate any significant psychopathology. Relatives of such “super-normal” control groups will have lower rates of psychiatric illness than the general population. Since such screening is not usually applied to index probands, rates of “screened-out” disorders may be increased in relatives of index versus “super-normal” control probands, producing spurious evidence for coaggregation. An algebraic model demonstrates that this artifactual coaggregation will be strongest for “screened-out” disorders that are both highly familial and common in the population.
Kenneth S. Kendler (Mon,) studied this question.