Sampling Variances in Twin and Sibling Studies of Man

Abstract
The sampling variances in twin and sibling studies of man for estimation of intraclass correlation coefficients and their relation to heritabilities are evaluated. For twins and full-sibs the higher the estimated heritability of a trait the smaller the sampling variance. With increase in the number of twin sets or of full-sibships studied, the sampling variances decrease by their proportions. Twin and full-sib studies with lower heritabilities (h2 < 0.25) need at least 50 sibships to obtain a significant estimate. Using half-sibs to estimate heritabilities, increase of the offspring number from the same parent would be more efficient for reducing the sampling variance of the heritability compared with increases of half-sibship families. However, because of the limited number of offspring per family in modern man, the efficiency of the half-sib design could be increased by the large number of monozygotic twin families. It appears that with only 2 or 3 children per full-sibship family, approximately 100 half-sibships are needed for significant estimate of heritability.