Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Rauschert, S.
Raubenheimer, K.
Melton, P. E.
and
Huang, R. C.
2020.
Machine learning and clinical epigenetics: a review of challenges for diagnosis and classification.
Clinical Epigenetics,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 1,
Deutsch, Curtis K.
Patnaik, Pooja P.
and
Greco, Frank A.
2021.
Is There a Characteristic Autonomic Response During Outbursts of Combative Behavior in Dementia Patients?.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease Reports,
Vol. 5,
Issue. 1,
p.
389.
Power, Mary E.
2021.
Synthetic threads through the web of life.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Vol. 118,
Issue. 22,
Hull, Rodney
Ramagaga, Serwalo
Nkosi, Nomsa
Marina, Rahaba
Kabahuma, Rosemary I.
and
Dlamini, Zodwa
2023.
Artificial Intelligence and Precision Oncology.
p.
117.
Target article
Behavior genetics and postgenomics
Related commentaries (24)
A call for an expanded synthesis of developmental and evolutionary paradigms
A developmental science commentary on Charney's “Behavior genetics and postgenomics”
A straw man's neogenome
Affirmation of a developmental systems approach to genetics
Assumptions in studies of heritability and genotype–phenotype association
Biology trumps statistics in the postgenomic era
Clinicians learn less and less about more and more until they know nothing about everything; researchers learn more and more about less and less until they know everything about nothing: Discuss
Epigenetic regulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor: Implications in neurodevelopment and behavior
Estimating the actual subject-specific genetic correlations in behavior genetics
From gene activity to behavior (and back again)
Gene-independent heritability of behavioural traits: Don't we also need to rethink the “environment”?
Genetic sensitivity to the environment, across lifetime
Heritability estimates in behavior genetics: Wasn't that station passed long ago?
Is behavioral genetics ‘too-big-to-know’ science?
Is genomics bad for you?
Neogenomic events challenge current models of heritability, neuronal plasticity dynamics, and machine learning
Non-Mendelian etiologic factors in neuropsychiatric illness: Pleiotropy, epigenetics, and convergence
Parental brain and socioeconomic epigenetic effects in human development
Postgenomics and genetic essentialism
Preventing a paradigm shift: A plea for the computational genome
Relational developmental systems: A paradigm for developmental science in the postgenomic era
The fate of heritability in the postgenomic era
The history of the nature/nurture issue
Twin and family studies are actually more important than ever
Author response
Humans, fruit flies, and automatons