The estimated proportion of the phenotypic variance in ASB explained by all SNPs was 5.2% with a standard error of 2.7% (p<.05). Sample sizes were too small in the sex-specific meta-analyses to be used to estimate SNP h2 for the male and female samples separately. We found a significant (corrected α=.006) and moderate negative genetic correlation between ASB and educational attainment (r=-.52, p=.005). Follow-up analyses, utilizing Fisher’s exact test, showed evidence of enrichment of low P (p-values below the threshold p<.001) in same SNPs for ASB and educational attainment (OR=3.26, p=.001). Moreover, we found a suggestive positive genetic correlation with neuroticism (r=.29, p=.02) and support for a negative genetic correlation between ASB and Age at Menopause (r=-.49, p=.01), Age of First Birth (r=-.43, p=.008) and a positive genetic correlation with Number of Children Ever Born (r=.42, p=.03), see Table 2. There was no evidence for genetic overlap between ASB and Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, ADHD or Age at Menarche.