Astral Codex Ten Podcast feed 09月25日
遗传与教育的迷思
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文章探讨了遗传在教育成就中的角色,从20世纪中叶的养育黄金时代到21世纪初的基因科学进步。早期研究表明教育成就约40%由遗传决定,但基因组关联研究未能找到足够的基因解释这一比例,导致“缺失遗传力”假说。近年来,随着样本规模的扩大,预测能力有所提高,但仍未完全解释遗传影响。文章介绍了反遗传决定论者的观点,质疑早期 twin 研究的准确性,并讨论当前遗传与教育成就关系的争议。

🧬 遗传因素在20世纪70年代被 twin 研究发现对教育成就有约40%的影响,这一发现基于对智力等社会相关特征的遗传决定性。

🔬 基因组关联研究未能找到足够的基因解释这一遗传影响,导致所谓的“缺失遗传力”假说,即遗传影响可能被低估。

📈 随着样本规模的扩大,基因组关联研究的预测能力有所提高,但仍有大量遗传影响未被解释,引发对 twin 研究准确性的质疑。

🤔 反遗传决定论者认为,早期 twin 研究可能低估了环境因素的影响,并提出遗传影响可能更为复杂,不完全由已知基因决定。

🔍 当前遗传与教育成就的关系仍存在争议,需要更大样本和更精细的研究方法来完全解释遗传与环境因素的相互作用。

The Story So Far

The mid-20th century was the golden age of nurture. Psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and the spirit of the ‘60s convinced most experts that parents, peers, and propaganda were the most important causes of adult personality.

Starting in the 1970s, the pendulum swung the other way. Twin studies shocked the world by demonstrating that most behavioral traits - especially socially relevant traits like IQ - were substantially genetic. Typical estimates for adult IQ found it was about 60% genetic, 40% unpredictable, and barely related at all to parenting or family environment.

By the early 2000s, genetic science reached a point where scientists could start pinpointing the particular genes behind any given trait. Early candidate gene studies, which hoped to find single genes with substantial contributions to IQ, depression, or crime, mostly failed. They were replaced with genome wide association studies, which accepted that most interesting traits were polygenic - controlled by hundreds or thousands of genes - and trawled the whole genome searching for variants that might explain 0.1% or even 0.01% of the pie. The goal shifted toward polygenic scores - algorithms that accepted thousands of genes as input and spit out predictions of IQ, heart disease risk, or some other outcome of interest.

The failed candidate gene studies had sample sizes in the three or four digits. The new genome-wide studies needed five or six digits to even get started. It was prohibitively difficult for individual studies to gather so many subjects, genotype them, and test them for the outcome of interest, so work shifted to big centralized genome repositories - most of all the UK Biobank - and easy-to-measure traits. Among the easiest of all was educational attainment (EA), ie how far someone had gotten in school. Were they a high school dropout? A PhD? Somewhere in between? This correlated with all the spicy outcomes of interest people wanted to debate - IQ, wealth, social class - while being objective and easy to ask about on a survey.

Twin studies suggested that IQ was about 60% genetic, and EA about 40%. This seemed to make sense at the time - how far someone gets in school depends partly on their intelligence, but partly on fuzzier social factors like class / culture / parenting. The first genome-wide studies and polygenic scores found enough genes to explain 2%pp1 of this 40% pie. The remaining 38%, which twin studies deemed genetic but where researchers couldn’t find the genes - became known as “the missing heritability” or “the heritability gap”.

Scientists came up with two hypothesis for the gap, which have been dueling ever since:

    Maybe twin studies are wrong. Maybe there are genes we haven’t found yet

For most of the 2010s, hypothesis 2 looked pretty good. Researchers gradually gathered bigger and bigger sample sizes, and found more and more of the missing heritability. A big 2018 study increased the predictive power of known genes from 2% to 10%. An even bigger 2022 study increased it to 14%, and current state of the art is around 17%. Seems like it was sample size after all! Once the samples get big enough we’ll reach 40% and finally close the gap, right?

This post is the story of how that didn’t happen, of the people trying to rehabilitate the twin-studies-are-wrong hypothesis, and of the current status of the debate. Its most important influence/foil is Sasha Gusev, whose blog The Infintesimal introduced me to the new anti-hereditarian movement and got me to research it further, but it’s also inspired by Eric Turkheimer, Alex Young (not himself an anti-hereditarian, but his research helped ignite interest in this area), and Awais Aftab.

(while I was working on this draft, the East Hunter Substack wrote a similar post. Theirs is good and I recommend it, but I think this one adds enough that I’m publishing anyway)

https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/missing-heritability-much-more-than

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相关标签

遗传力 教育成就 基因组关联研究 缺失遗传力 反遗传决定论
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