AI Article Synopsis

  • It’s challenging to distinguish whether phenotypic differences between groups arise from genetic or environmental factors without controlled experiments.
  • Some researchers argue this issue mainly arises in extreme cases and propose methods that relate heritable variation within groups to that among groups.
  • The authors review three approaches—between-group heritability, a specific statistic from evolutionary genetics, and ancestry variation methods—demonstrating mathematically that within-group data cannot adequately separate the genetic and environmental causes of differences between groups, supporting their argument with simulation results.

Article Abstract

Without the ability to control or randomize environments (or genotypes), it is difficult to determine the degree to which observed phenotypic differences between two groups of individuals are due to genetic vs. environmental differences. However, some have suggested that these concerns may be limited to pathological cases, and methods have appeared that seem to give-directly or indirectly-some support to claims that aggregate heritable variation within groups can be related to heritable variation among groups. We consider three families of approaches: the "between-group heritability" sometimes invoked in behavior genetics, the statistic [Formula: see text] used in empirical work in evolutionary quantitative genetics, and methods based on variation in ancestry in an admixed population, used in anthropological and statistical genetics. We take up these examples to show mathematically that information on within-group genetic and phenotypic information in the aggregate cannot separate among-group differences into genetic and environmental components, and we provide simulation results that support our claims. We discuss these results in terms of the long-running debate on this topic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10962975PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2319496121DOI Listing

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