Read The Genius in All of Us: New Insights Into Genetics, Talent, and IQ Online
Authors: David Shenk
Tags: #Psychology, #Cognitive Psychology & Cognition, #Cognitive Psychology
Intelligence
Herrnstein, Richard J., and Charles Murray.
The Bell Curve
. Free Press, 1994,. The authors average a number of estimates from 40–80%.
Personality
Bouchard, T. J., Jr., and Yoon-Mi Hur. “Genetic and environmental influences on the continuous scales of the Myers-Briggs type indicator: an analysis based on twins reared apart.”
Journal of Personality
66, no. 2 (2008): 135.
Motor Skills
Fox, Paul W., Scott L. Hershberger, and Thomas J. Bouchard Jr. “Genetic and environmental contributions to the acquisition of a motor skill.”
Nature
384 (1996): 356.
Creativity
Nichols, R. “Twin studies of ability, personality, and interests.”
Homo
29 (1978): 158–73.
“Since personality is heritable …” (
New York Times
)
:
Nicholas Wade, “The Twists and Turns of History, and of DNA,”
New York Times
, March 12, 2006.
“Men’s Fidelity Controlled by ‘Cheating Genetics’” (Drudge Report)
:
Drudge Report, September 3, 2008.
Also: “Forty percent of [marital] infidelity [can] be blamed on genes.” (Highfield, “Unfaithful?”)
This is really an extraordinary and very unfortunate statement. Lawrence Wright is a distinguished journalist and writer, and I am an admirer. But even great journalists and scientists can get caught up in misinterpreted science, and that’s what appears to have happened in this case.
“The models suggest,” Turkheimer wrote, “that in impoverished families, 60% of the variance in IQ is accounted for by the shared environment, and the contributions of genes
is close to zero
; in affluent families, the result is almost exactly the reverse.” (Italics mine.) (Turkheimer et al., “Socioeconomic status modifies heritability of IQ in young children,” p. 632.)
“a model of [genes plus environment] is too simple
”:
Turkheimer et al., “Socioeconomic status modifies heritability of IQ in young children,” p. 627.
Heritability, explains author Matt Ridley, “is a population average, meaningless for any individual person
”:
Ridley,
Nature via Nurture
, p. 76.
Early shared GxE
.
Identical twins share a wide collection of similarities not just because they share the same genes, but because they share the same genes
and
early environments—hence, the same gene-environment interactions throughout gestation.
In addition to nine months of shared prenatal environment, most also have some weeks or months of shared postnatal environment before separation.
Shared cultural circumstances
.
In identical twins comparisons, shared biology always grabs all the attention. Inevitably overlooked is the vast number of shared cultural traits: same age, same sex, same ethnicity, and, in most cases, a raft of other shared (or very similar) social, economic, and cultural experiences.
The mere fact that two people are born on the same day can have an important impact on their subsequent behavior and beliefs. (Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
, p. 105.)
For other psychologists not to recognize their importance, he argues, is a “stunning failure.” (Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
, p. 100.)
To test the influence of just a few of them, psychologist
W.J. Wyatt assembled fifty college students completely unrelated and unknown to one another and then placed them in random pairings purely on the basis of age and sex: Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
,; Wyatt, Posey, Welker, and Seamonds, “Natural levels of similarities between identical twins and between unrelated people,” p. 64.
Hidden dissimilarities
.
Statisticians call it “the multiple-end-point problem”: the seductive trap of selectively picking data that fit a certain thesis, while conveniently discarding the rest. For every tiny similarity between the Jim twins, there were thousands of tiny (but unmentioned) dissimilarities. “There are endless possibilities for doing bad statistical inferences,” says Stanford statistician Persi Diaconis. “You get to pick which features you want to resonate to. When you look at your mom, you might say, ‘I’m exactly the opposite.’ Someone else might say, ‘Hmm.’”
Gina Kolata adds: “And when we look at our parents, or our children, and see ourselves, it is easier than we think to get caught in the multiple-end-points statistical trap.” (Kolata, “Identity.”)
New York Times
science writer Natalie Angier adds
:
“What the public doesn’t hear of are the many discrepancies between the twins. I know of two cases in which television producers tried to do documentaries about identical twins reared apart but then found the twins so distinctive in personal style—one talky and outgoing, the other shy and insecure—that the shows collapsed of their own unpersuasiveness”: Angier, “Separated by Birth?”
These separated-twin stories, added behavior geneticist Richard Rose, “[make] good show biz but uncertain science.” (Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
, p. 107.)
Jay Joseph adds:
Judith Harris has written that “there are too many of these stories for them all to be coincidences,” and it is true—they are not coincidences; they
are selectively reported “show biz” combined with a stunning failure to recognize the environmental factors influencing these twins’ similar behaviors. (Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
, p. 107.)
Coordination and exaggeration
.
All twins feel a close bond with each other, and while child twins growing up together might often cling to their differences, reunited adult twins understandably revel in their similarities. Researchers try to guard against any purposeful or unwitting coordination, but in her 1981 book
Identical Twins Reared Apart
, Susan Farber reviewed 121 cases of twins described by researchers as “separated at birth” or “reared apart.” Only three of those pairs had actually been separated shortly after birth
and
studied at their first reunion.
Were these studied twins truly separate? Susan Farber reviewed 121 cases in her 1981 book
Identical Twins Reared Apart—
only three pairs had been truly separated shortly after birth and studied at their first reunion.
Consider also the case of Oskar Stöhr and Jack Yufe, perhaps the most compelling reunited twins ever. The identical twins were separated shortly after birth by their divorced parents, the former raised in Nazi Germany, the latter raised as a Jew in Trinidad. Despite the obvious cultural differences, their reunion at age forty-seven stunned the world with similarities: wire-rimmed glasses, mustaches, two-pocket shirts, love of spicy foods and sweet liquors, absentmindedness, habits of sleeping in front of the TV and flushing the toilet before using it. Their reported similarities were astounding indeed—until one realized that they had already been in contact for twenty-five years.
Another entertaining twosome earned the nickname “Giggle Sisters” for their constant and similar laugh. They were also both frugal, shared blue as a favorite color, drank their coffee black and cold, “squidged” up their noses, had once worked as polling clerks, and had each suffered a miscarriage with their first pregnancy. After being interviewed by researchers, though, the Giggle Sisters acknowledged inventing at least one shared life goal. (Joseph,
The Gene Illusion
,; Farber,
Identical Twins Reared Apart
, p. 100.)
Bouchard reported that the average age of his twins studied was forty, with an average of thirty years spent apart—meaning that there was an average of ten years of contact. (Wright,
Twins
, p. 69.)
Do you, reader, perhaps have a “cultural twin” out there who you’ve never met? Someone the same age from your same hometown who shares a few of your food passions, music passions, etc.? I grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio, in the 1970s. I wonder how hard it would be to find a forty-two-year-old I’ve never met from the same region who today likes Bruce Springsteen, Graeter’s ice cream, and Porsche cars, who plays the acoustic guitar, and who lost interest in baseball after Pete Rose left the Cincinnati Reds. I’d wager I could find one on the streets of Cincinnati in about three minutes. We could probably fill a baseball stadium with us …