It might be useful to look at any twin study through this lens; if we know for sure the genes are the same and nature is off the table, how much variance remains?
- Genetics (DNA seq)
- Epigentics (Histone acetylation, base methylation etc)
- Brain wiring from experiences
- Chemical impact from experiences, e.g. nutrition, toxins, sunlight, muscle dev etc etc.> - Chemical impact from experiences, e.g. nutrition, toxins, sunlight, muscle dev etc etc.
Are these not all part of the nurture / environment bucket? Or are we drawing a hard boundary between nurture (eg, parenting) and environment? (eg, lead in the pipes)
For example, epigentics is sort of both "nature" and "nurture", in that you can pick up these traits, and pass them on/get them passed on.
So this study has 87-52-25=10 data points? Am I reading this correctly? Quite the reach to conclude what the article claims, if so.
Authors plead innocence!
There are two different kinds of IQ tests: convergent and divergent. Convergent tests are more common and test either knowledge or pattern matching. These tests are called convergent because they are a center of truth and conformance to that truth is the measured performance criteria.
Divergent tests measure the individual's creativity and abstract reasoning. The source of truth is the quantity of diversity of results submitted by the participant.
The implicit success criteria for convergent testing is reading comprehension. A person with dyslexia, for example, will perform worse on these tests irrespective of their learning speed, learned knowledge, intellectual curiosity, or creativity. This is a form of bias. Other forms of bias include memorization of terms, such as SAT preparation.
To further complicate things these measures typically only account for academic intelligence. Other forms of intelligence include social intelligence, spatial intelligence, creativity, conscientiousness, and so forth. In the concept of multi-dimensional intelligence, which is what is actually addressed in practice in the real world after high school, academic intelligence alone has very little benefit. Its like height in basketball where after 6.5ft all other factors become more important for all participants.
l2silver•53m ago
wjb3•49m ago
bena•46m ago
It's not nothing, but IQ is already a little squishy. No one's IQ is a single number. But the article also goes into problems with the study and other potential issues.
Basically, they're saying there is this pattern in the data as recorded, but there are multiple confounding factors and issues with collecting the data in the first place.
Aloisius•31m ago
tptacek•14m ago
DaveZale•45m ago
jakobnissen•43m ago
nabla9•42m ago
If someone is 15 points above average, they are in 84th percentile, or in top 16%.