SerialStateLineXer t1_j1zo0xb wrote
Reply to comment by Vito_The_Magnificent in Schooling substantially improves intelligence, but neither lessens nor widens the impacts of socioeconomics and genetics by i_have_thick_loads
>I wonder if you'd get the same results in 18 year olds, or with a more complete PGS model
You'd definitely see genetics play a much larger role. There's a huge amount of missing heritability in PGS models, i.e. they explain only a small portion of the heritability that we know is there from twin studies. As a result, studies like this underestimate the effects of genetics and overestimate the effects of SES.
FelsensteinsMonster t1_j1zsi73 wrote
This makes a lot of assumptions about estimates from twins being accurate and ignores that the ostensible predictive gains between a 1 million sample education GWAS and a 3 million sample GWAS was mostly lost when confounders were accounted for. If anything the poor quality of polygenic scores will make non-genetic factors appear genetic in these kinds of models
Vito_The_Magnificent t1_j1zxlzq wrote
>1 million sample education GWAS and a 3 million sample GWAS was mostly lost when confounders were accounted for
Oooo for EA? I didn't see that one. Got the paper handy?
I got stock in 23&Me that I may need to sell if GWAS is gonna cap out at 0.1 on everything.
FelsensteinsMonster t1_j200n32 wrote
It’s this one, check out the sibling analysis compared to whole-sample. https://idp.nature.com/authorize?response_type=cookie&client_id=grover&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nature.com%2Farticles%2Fs41588-022-01016-z
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