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by A_D_E_P_T
588 days ago
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There's this: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5985927/ First sentence of the conclusion: "Genetic association studies have confirmed a century of quantitative genetic research showing that inherited DNA differences are responsible for substantial individual differences in intelligence test scores." Related: https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1408777111 The trouble is that, like height, IQ is governed by a vast network of "genes of small effect," so a comprehensive view has proven difficult to nail down. Progress is apparently being made, though slowly. > There is growing evidence that group IQ heritability isn't evidence of genetic causation. What evidence do you speak of? |
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An example of evidence against the reliability of educational attainment and intelligence heritability statistics: comparing intra-family heritability (across large numbers of families) to population-wide studies: for educational attainment, it turns out there's little correlation between the two; for simpler phenotypical traits, there's almost 100% correlation.
To sum this up:
1. The 2018 Plomin study gives sharply lower genetic/EA numbers than were floating around previously (say, from the Jensen-ist era)
2. Plomin's own numbers were preliminary and overstated
3. Researchers in the field criticized that study nonetheless
4. Subsequent studies on direct heritability and molecular heritability put even lower ceilings on it (basically, all credible behavioral trait heritability work has been done after 2018 --- and in fact this is broadly true of a lot of genetics work, not just trying to statistically mine behavioral traits out of genome scoring)
5. Even those results have flunked basic sanity tests (for instance, getting wildly different results in intra-family vs population-wide studies).
It's not looking good for people fixated on this idea.
† I'm being very loosy-goosey with the numbers and units here