Spatial skills are important in everyday life, from navigation to assembling flat-pack furniture, and have also been linked to success in the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) professions.
However, people differ considerably in these skills and researchers think it could be partly down to anxiety.
Similarly, anxiety about maths is thought to impair achievement in the subject at school and deter people from using these skills in daily life.
If genes and environments contributing to one form of anxiety, such as spatial anxiety, are different from those contributing to another form of anxiety, such as mathematics anxiety, this suggests they should be managed differently in order for interventions to be successful.
Researchers from King's College London measured anxiety in a sample of more than 1,400 twin pairs aged 19 to 21.
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