Abstract: | A method is presented for the analysis of data from crossfostering experiments in which parts of litters are reciprocally interchanged at birth. Observed variances and covariances of differently related individuals are expressed as functions of theoretical causal components of phenotypic variance (additive direct, dominance direct, additive maternal, dominance maternal, direct-maternal covariance, and environmental). Causal components are estimated by weighted least squares analysis of this system of equations, including a ridge-regression procedure to examine consequences of correlation between observed components. Ridge regression suggests that dominance direct genetic variance is generally underestimated, but that narrow-sense heritability estimates are reliable. |