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Published byBarbara Daniel Modified over 9 years ago
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Genetics and Society
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Everything’s Heritable First Law. All human behavioral traits are heritable Second Law. The effect of being raised in the same family is smaller than the effect of genes Third Law. A substantial portion of the variation in complex human behavioral traits is not accounted for by the (additive) effects of genes or families.
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Genetic Architecture Fourth Law: Genetic variants that are common in a population have very small individual effects on behavioral traits Not always like this in other species Can be different in subpopulations Strong selection can change architecture
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The twin studies are all right According to GCAT
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Selection Every society selects for something Usually unintended
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Breeder’s Equation R = h 2 S R = response h 2 = narrow-sense heritability S = selection differential
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Selection can be fast or slow Interesting changes can happen in less than 1000 years Maximum time available for human differentiation, ~100,000 years
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Dan Freedman’s babies Behavioral differences at birth
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Populations, Classes, Jobs Selection changes populations Classes change by selection and differential recruitment Jobs, differential recruitment
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Distributions Modest differences in the mean imply big differences at the extremes
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Genetic Isolation Geographic Separation Endogamy
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Epigenetic Inheritance Trendy Rare Hard to imagine adaptive mechanism fuhgeddaboudit
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Human Capital Formation Usual Model: Parents invest in human capital Fewer kids is better Not true for genetic contribution
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