Institute for Behavioral Genetics, 50 Years of Excellence, 1967-2017

The IBG building under construction.

Breaking Ground: Jerry McClearn, Kurt Schlesinger, and Jim Wilson.

Founded in 1967, the Institute for Behavioral Genetics (IBG) was one of the first research institutes dedicated to听examining the genetic and environmental bases of individual differences in behavior. From its humble beginnings with three faculty,听听IBG has grown to become a preeminent institution in behavioral genetics, characterized by the breadth and innovation of its research听and training programs. Although the methodology of behavioral genetics has changed enormously since its start in 1967, IBG continues to adhere to its core principles of research integrity and excellence in training.听

What motivated the founding of an institute devoted to research and training in behavioral genetics? The late Gerry McClearn wrote in his original proposal: 鈥淭he principle that much of the variability in learning ability, in perceptual acuteness, in personality, in susceptibility to mental disorder, is a necessary consequence of polygenic segregation has implications for ed- ucation, for law, and, indeed, for most social institutions.鈥 There were, to be sure, detailed technical and scientific arguments听for the timeliness of studying genetic influences on both animal and human behavior, but it was surely the broader societal and public health implications of this area of research that made it so appealing to the regents of the university, who approved McClearn鈥檚 proposal in January 1967, and make it perhaps even more compelling 50 years on. If you ask how genetic factors can affect your risk for drug and alcohol addiction, whether genes are involved in learning disabilities, how the course of Alzheimer鈥檚 or other diseases of aging are affected by your genetic make-up, whether some people might be at genetic risk for disorders such as schizophrenia or depression, or how genes influence your brain or cognitive functions, then you are asking the kinds of questions that behavioral geneticists look to answer. And these are questions that are important to individuals, to families and to society.

During the 50 years since the institute鈥檚 inauguration, there听have been many significant milestones and accomplishments. Among them are the founding of the journal听Behavior Genetics听by John DeFries and Steven Vandenberg in 1970, along with the founding of the Behavior Genetics Association. The Hawaii Family Study of Cognition, the Colorado Family Reading Study and the Colorado Adoption Project were each initiated in the early 1970s, and 1977 saw the establishment of the Alcohol Research Center. DeFries and McClearn began a classic series of textbooks on behavior genetics in 1973, which has continued to the present. The MacArthur Longitudinal Twin Study was founded in 1986, and these twins and subsequent extensions of the sample are, like the families in the Colorado Adoption Project, still being studied today. The Colorado Learning Disabilities Center was founded in 1990.

In 1988, a third major interdisciplinary research center, the Drug Abuse Research Center, was founded, and this line of research continues in the form of the Colorado Center on Antisocial Drug Dependence, founded in 1997 and focusing on the genetic contributions to the pattern of behavior in adolescents characterized by a range of externalizing problems including drug abuse and conduct disorder.

The International Workshop on the Methodology of Twin and Family Studies was first held in Boulder in 1990, and continues as the annual one-week training Workshop on Statistical Genetic Methods for Human Complex Traits, supported by the National Institute of Mental Health. It