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Correction| Volume 50, ISSUE 5, P394, September 01, 2001

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Erratum

        There are three errors in the abstract of the article “Genetic and Environmental Influences on the Temporal Association between Earlier Anxiety and Later Depression in Girls” which appears on pages 1040–1049 of Biological Psychiatry, Vol. 49, No. 12. The complete correct abstract appears below.
        Background:The purpose of the present study was to investigate the role of genetic and environmental factors in the association between depressive symptoms and symptoms of overanxious disorder, simple phobias, and separation anxiety in 8–13 year old and 14–17 year old girls.
        Methods:Multivariate genetic models were fitted to child reported longitudinal symptom data gathered from clinical interview on 415 MZ and 194 DZ female twin pairs from the Virginia Twin Study of Adolescent Behavioral Development (VTSABD).
        Results:Model-fitting results suggest there are distinct etiological patterns underlying the association between depression and the different anxiety syndromes during the course of development: 1) specific genetic influences on depression after age 14 reflect liability to symptoms of earlier overanxious disorder (OAD) and simple phobias; 2) aspects of the shared environment that influence symptoms of depression before age 14 contribute to symptoms of earlier separation anxiety and simple phobias later in adolescence; and 3) the shared environmental influence on depression in 14+ girls also affects liability to symptoms of concurrent OAD and persistent separation anxiety.
        Conclusions:These results suggest that depression before and after age 14 may be etiologically distinct syndromes. Earlier symptoms of OAD and (to a lesser extent phobic symptoms) reflect the same genetic risk, and separation anxiety symptoms both before and after age 14 reflect the same environmental risk that influence liability to depressive symptoms expressed in middle to late adolescence.