Idea  Lab
After the Bell Curve 
By DAVID L. KIRP
When it comes to explaining the roots of intelligence, the fight between  partisans of the gene and partisans of the environment is ancient and fierce.  Each side challenges the other’s intellectual bona fides and political  agendas. What is at stake is not just the definition of good science but also  the meaning of the just society. The nurture crowd is predisposed to revive the  War on Poverty, while the hereditarians typically embrace a Social Darwinist  perspective.
A century’s worth of quantitative-genetics literature concludes that a person’s  I.Q. is remarkably stable and that about three-quarters of I.Q. differences  between individuals are attributable to heredity. This is how I.Q. is widely  understood — as being mainly “in the genes” — and that understanding has  been used as a rationale for doing nothing about seemingly intractable social  problems like the black-white school-achievement gap and the widening income  disparity.
  
 "Widely"?
Earth to New York Times:  As a close reader of your newspaper, I'm having  trouble recalling a single article in this decade that paid serious attention to  the possibility that genetic differences might partly account for the  black-white school achievement gap.
Does this imply that the NYT knows that the politically correct verbiage that  they print isn't supported by the scientific consensus?
  
 If nature  disposes, the argument goes, there is little to be gained by intervening. In  their 1994 best seller, “The Bell Curve,” Richard Herrnstein and Charles  Murray relied on this research to argue that the United States is a genetic  meritocracy and to urge an end to affirmative action. Since there is no way to  significantly boost I.Q., prominent geneticists like Arthur Jensen of Berkeley  have contended, compensatory education is a bad bet.
But what if the supposed opposition between heredity and environment is  altogether misleading? A new generation of studies shows that genes and  environment don’t occupy separate spheres — that much of what is labeled “hereditary”  becomes meaningful only in the context of experience. “It doesn’t really  matter whether the heritability of I.Q. is this particular figure or that one,”  says Sir Michael Rutter of the University of London. “Changing the environment  can still make an enormous difference.” If heredity defines the limits of  intelligence, the research shows, experience largely determines whether those  limits will be reached. And if this is so, the prospects for remedying social  inequalities may be better than we thought.
  
 This is a confused way to  get to a reasonable point. There's nothing in this article that suggests that  the nature-nurture distinction is invalid. In reality, what the studies cited in  this article suggest is that the heritability of IQ is less than 1.00,  especially in poor environments.
Kirp cites two studies. I posted  about the more interesting one, a French adoption study, back on June 20. The definitive  analysis was done by Darth Quixote at GNXP two days earlier.
It's a very intriguing analysis because it tries to overcome the usual  restriction of range problem in American adoption studies, which typically have  shown almost no impact of home environment on adult IQ. The methodological  problem is that most adoptions these days are made by affluent couples of the  biological offspring of couples of lower status. If you are, say, Bill Gates's  kid, you probably won't end up being adopted by some meth head couple in a  trailer park. That's good for the kid, but not for the science.
Capron and Duyme came up with eight cases of children who are the biological  offspring of highly educated parents being adopted by poorly educated parents  (along with ten cases of the other three alternatives: high nature - high  nurture, low nature - high nurture, low nature - low nurture, for a grand total  of 38 kids in the study. But it's still a good first step.
  
 Regardless  of whether the adopting families were rich or poor, Capron and Duyme learned,  children whose biological parents were well-off had I.Q. scores averaging 16  points higher than those from working-class parents. Yet what is really  remarkable is how big a difference the adopting families’ backgrounds made all  the same. The average I.Q. of children from well-to-do parents who were placed  with families from the same social stratum was 119.6. But when such infants were  adopted by poor families, their average I.Q. was 107.5 — 12 points lower. The  same holds true for children born into impoverished families: youngsters adopted  by parents of similarly modest means had average I.Q.’s of 92.4, while the  I.Q.’s of those placed with well-off parents averaged 103.6. These studies  confirm that environment matters — the only, and crucial, difference between  these children is the lives they have led.
  
 It strikes me as plausible  that the nature-nurture balance could be in the 60-40 range, as the French  found, at least when sizable environmental differences are possible. A study  with a sample size of 38 is not conclusive, but I personally find this more  likely than the idea that adoption would have zero impact on IQ.
Also, there is evidence that IQ is malleable before puberty, but that people  generally revert to their genetic level as they mature. (Sandra Scarr's  Minnesota Transracial Adoption study followed this pattern, with the hopeful  early IQ results of black children adopted by upper middle white parents being  dashed by their scores falling to an average of 89 when they were retested at  17.) The French study tested the adopted children at age 14, which is fairly  late, although probably not late enough to settle this question.
I suspect that having a higher IQ as a child has long term benefits even if you  revert back to your long term norm as an adult. Somebody with a long term IQ of  80 who had a good upbringing that raised it to 90 as a child is much more likely  to learn how to read and how to be a functioning adult than somebody with the  same genes who had a bad upbringing. But I haven't seen any direct studies of  this.
Kirp contends that the French study supports his pet project of "universal  preschool," although a less biased reading probably suggests that if  adoption can work to raise IQs, then little children being raised by high status  moms are better off staying home with mom than going off to some run-of-the-mill  government preschool.
Anyway, the effects of preschools were intensively studied directly in the 1960s  through 1980s, and the results in terms of boosting IQ were unimpressive, unless  the expenditures were so vast as to approach adoption. On the other hand, Head  Start seems to have some good effect on reducing delinquency later on. IQ ain't  everything.
  
 When  quantitative geneticists estimate the heritability of I.Q., they are generally  relying on studies of twins. Identical twins are in effect clones who share all  their genes; fraternal twins are siblings born together — just half of their  genes are identical. If heredity explains most of the difference in  intelligence, the logic goes, the I.Q. scores of identical twins will be far  more similar than the I.Q.’s of fraternal twins. And this is what the research  has typically shown. Only when children have spent their earliest years in the  most wretched of circumstances, as in the infamous case of the Romanian orphans,  treated like animals during the misrule of Nicolae Ceausescu, has it been  thought that the environment makes a notable difference. Otherwise, genes rule.
Then along came Eric Turkheimer to shake things up. Turkheimer, a psychology  professor at the University of Virginia, is the kind of irreverent academic who  gives his papers user-friendly titles like “Spinach and Ice Cream” and “Mobiles.”  He also has a reputation as a methodologist’s methodologist. In combing  through the research, he noticed that the twins being studied had middle-class  backgrounds. The explanation was simple — poor people don’t volunteer for  research projects — but he wondered whether this omission mattered.
Together with several colleagues, Turkheimer searched for data on twins from a  wider range of families. He found what he needed in a sample from the 1970’s  of more than 50,000 American infants, many from poor families, who had taken  I.Q. tests at age 7. In a widely-discussed 2003 article, he found that, as  anticipated, virtually all the variation in I.Q. scores for twins in the sample  with wealthy parents can be attributed to genetics. The big surprise is among  the poorest families. Contrary to what you might expect, for those children, the  I.Q.’s of identical twins vary just as much as the I.Q.’s of fraternal  twins. The impact of growing up impoverished overwhelms these children’s  genetic capacities. In other words, home life is the critical factor for  youngsters at the bottom of the economic barrel. “If you have a chaotic  environment, kids’ genetic potential doesn’t have a chance to be expressed,”  Turkheimer explains. “Well-off families can provide the mental stimulation  needed for genes to build the brain circuitry for intelligence.”
  
 This theory is plausible.  It's comparable to the argument  I made back in 2002 that comparing the average African IQ of 70 to the 85  average of their African-American cousins suggests that the bad environment in  Africa is keeping Africans from reaching their genetic potential.
On the other hand, the connection between this theory and Turkheimer's actual  findings seems tenuous.
Unfortunately, Turkheimer's  paper isn't terribly persuasive because it seems disingenuous. It's  particularly frustrating to read because, as far as I can tell, it refuses to  tell us what were the average IQs of the children tested, or most of the other  most interesting basic facts about the data.
A few years ago I emailed Turkheimer asking him to reveal these numbers, but he  never responded. Later, I got an email from a friend of Turkheimer's chiding me  for criticizing his paper. When I explained that I needed to know these basic  facts about the study, he agreed, and offered to ask Turkheimer for the numbers,  but then I never heard anything more.
This is important because psychometrician John  Ray has put forward a plausible-sounding alternative suggestion:
  
 Full  publication of the study has not been done as yet but from what we know so far  it seems that what they found was in fact much simpler than that. They found  that if you separated out low income respondents (mostly black) and studied them  alone, the role of heredity was less important in explaining IQ differences.  That does sound like a real finding but it is in fact what statisticians would  call a “restriction of range effect”. In other words, if you take ANY group  and select out a subset that is relatively homogeneous with regard to some  variable, differences in that variable will tend to have less importance in  explaining other differences. Since socioeconomic status and race are  substantially correlated with heritable IQ, that is precisely what these  researchers have done: Selected a group that is relatively homogeneous in  genetic inheritance for IQ and then said: “Hey! Differences in genetic  inheritance are not so important here!” Statisticians would call the finding  an “artifact” -- i.e. something created by the research procedure rather  than a genuine finding about the world.
  
 But, Turkheimer won't tell  us the numbers, so everything is just speculation. 
 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer