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The NatureNurture Debate

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Title: The NatureNurture Debate


1
The Nature-Nurture Debate
Approaches to Psychology Lecture 26, The
Nature-Nurture Debate
2
Lecture contents
  • Group differences in IQ.
  • Population variation in IQ Heritability and the
    environment.
  • What can and cannot be inferred from heritablity
    indices.
  • Culture and intelligence testing.
  • Modifying IQ scores.
  • My tentative conclusions.

3
The U.S. Immigration Act of 1924
  • Rigid quotas to restrict the influx of
    biologically weaker stock from southern and
    eastern Europe.
  • The proof? Members of these groups had lower Army
    Intelligence Scores than obtained by Northern
    European-Americans.
  • These scores turned out to correlate with length
    of time in the States, improving with English
    language proficiency and AUS cultural knowledge.
  • After years of residency, European are of origin
    had no discernible effect.
  • A seemingly hereditary difference was revealed as
    due to environmental factors related to genetic
    ones.

4
Group differences
  • Numerous studies have found that average IQ for
    U.S. blacks is 85-90, i.e., 10 to 15 points lower
    than for U.S. whites.
  • The dispute revolves around why this is so and
    whether much can be done about it.
  • The difference in average racial IQs decreases
    proportionate to the extent that environments are
    relevantly matched (e.g., on SES dimensions).
  • Also, average IQ for U.S. blacks adopted into
    white middle-class households is 110 (25 points
    higher than average blacks, 10 points higher than
    average whites).
  • Thus, differences in group means seem at least
    largely to be due to different environments.
  • The rest of the lecture concerns variation in
    individual scores within given populations.

5
A distinction and an interaction
  • Genotypic traits are genetic potentialities.
  • Phenotypic traits are manifest characteristics.
  • All phenotypic traits are often claimed to be the
    result of an interaction between the genotype and
    the environment
  • There can be no organism without a genotype, and
    this genotype cannot express itself independently
    of the environment (Gleitman et al., 1999, p.
    655)
  • Organisms are dependent on the genotype, but are
    all traits so dependent once the organism exists?

6
Heritability indices
  • a heritability index shows the proportional
    contribution of genetic or heriditary factors to
    the total variance of a particular trait in a
    given population under specific conditions
  • Anastasi Urbina (1997, p. 297)
  • E.g., A heritability index of .70 means that 70
    of the variance is attributable to hereditary
    factors (with the remainder being attributable to
    the environment).

7
How heritability indices are calculated
  • Primarily, by examining resemblances among
    genetically related people. E.g.,
  • Twin studies
  • 1) Compare monozygotic and dizygotic twins.
  • 2) Compare siblings (especially monozygotic twins
    reared together and apart.
  • - Adoption studies
  • Compare adopted children with both biological and
    adopted relatives.

8
Correlations between IQ scores for family members
9
Difficulties with heritability indices
  • Unassessed contributions of environmental
    factors.
  • Monozygotic (identical) twins may share more
    similar environments than do dyzygotic
    (fraternal) twins.
  • Distal environments can be similar and close ones
    rather different.
  • There may be genetic influences on environments.
  • Issues of generalisability from twins to
    non-twins.
  • E.g., Twins more likely to have prenatal trauma
    leading to severe mental retardation (and
    inclusion of such people raises heritability
    indices).

10
Inheriting differences
  • Heritability coefficients are estimates of genes
    on individual differences within a population.
    They are not estimates of the relative importance
    of genes and the environment.
  • Westen (1998, p. 348)
  • They indicate determinants of variances
    (differences) not means (similarities).

11
Inheriting differences from differences
  • Heritability estimates are highly dependent on
    the sample.
  • Westen (1998, p. 348)
  • Heritability indices are frequently obtained from
    relatively homogeneous environments but
    relatively genetically diverse people.
  • Including a random sample of people from various
    environments would typically lower heritability
    indices.

12
Inheriting differences from specific
gene-situation interactions
  • Any change in either hereditary or environmental
    conditions would be liable to alter the
    heritability index.
  • Anastasi Urbina (1997, p. 298)
  • E.g., making either the gene pool or the
    environment more or less homogeneous in ways that
    affect the characteristic of interest (e.g.,
    intelligence).

13
Average inheritance effects
  • Almost irrespective of the size of a
    heritability index in the population, a
    particular individuals characteristics may be
    almost entirely determined by their genes, their
    environment, or any combination of the two.
  • E.g., intelligence is largely hereditary, but any
    particular instance of extraordinarily high or
    low (or even average) intelligence may result
    from extraordinary genetic conditions,
    extraordinary environmental conditions, or both.

14
Indicating actualities, not potentials
  • Even if the heritability index of a trait in a
    given population is 100, it does not follow that
    the contribution of environment to that trait is
    unimportant.
  • Anastasi Urbina (1997, p. 298)
  • It simply follows that the environment is having
    no differential effect across individuals in that
    population.

15
Cultural bias in IQ tests
  • Linguistic familiarity.
  • Vocabulary, dialect.
  • Content familiarity.
  • Information, concepts, tasks
  • Medium familiarity.
  • Paper and pencil, interview
  • Test motivation.
  • Every test tends to favour persons from the
    culture in which it was developed
  • Anastasi Urbina (1997, p. 342)

16
Modifying IQ scores
  • IQ is not fixed it is amenable to modification.
  • Educationally impoverished environments depress
    IQ.
  • Interventions (and other factors) that richen
    such environments increase IQ.
  • Worldwide improvements in IQ scores over time 3
    IQ points every 10 years (The Flynn effect).

17
My (tentative) conclusions
  • Substantially overlapping variation in IQ scores
    across groups makes differential treatment of
    members of those groups an example of prejudice.
  • Whatever the difference in the means and the
    reasons for such difference.
  • Evidence for genetic differences in average IQ
    across groups is poor.
  • (I have encountered no relevant evidence about
    possible current differences in IQ heritability
    across groups.)
  • Evidence for environmental differences in average
    IQ across groups is strong.
  • Evidence for (current) genetic differences in IQ
    scores within groups is strong.
  • Evidence for the ability to influence IQ scores
    environmentally is strong.
  • All the above holds for intelligence as well as
    for IQ, only more so.
  • Overall conclusion From social science and
    societal perspectives, it makes sense to look for
    both genetic and environmental determinants of
    intellectual and other important functioning.
  • There is no compelling evidence that any such
    functioning is genetically determined.
  • As a consequence of this, it is better to
    recognize inhibitors and enhancers, and then
    learn how to potentially overcome the former and
    exploit the latter.

18
Points to ponder
  • Environmental improvements can increase average
    IQ scores. Would you predict that they also
    affect heritability indices for IQ with the
    relevant populations. If not, why not and, if so,
    why (and how)?
  • How convincing is Gleitmans argument (p. 662)
    that studies such as Quay (1971) demonstrate that
    cultural bias in IQ tests is evidently not
    responsible for average racial difference in IQ
    scores? Hint content (esp. information) bias.
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