Message from @TheUserNameofPeace

Discord ID: 638988078479835136


2019-10-30 06:28:12 UTC  

@BabygottBach that quote is meaningless without context

2019-10-30 06:28:13 UTC  

lol

2019-10-30 06:28:27 UTC  

`Finally, VPVP can be effected by non-random correlations between genotypes and environments referred to as gene-environment covariation, COV(G,E)COV(G,E). For example, if plants with a genotype that tends to produce large plants also select nutrient- rich environments and plants with a genotype that tends to produce small plants also select nutrient- poor environments, the variance in height would be increased. If the relation was switched the variance would decrease (Futuyma 1998). `

2019-10-30 06:28:42 UTC  

I still would like you to explain why twins keep performing similarly across measures and studies @BabygottBach

2019-10-30 06:28:44 UTC  

there's that @Deleted User

2019-10-30 06:29:01 UTC  

@BabygottBach Blacks underperform whites worldwide

2019-10-30 06:29:09 UTC  

@Nerthulas, I'm not familiar with the sociological research on this matter.

2019-10-30 06:29:17 UTC  

Let's try them in the vacuum of space

2019-10-30 06:29:22 UTC  

Nigga I can't understand these snippets of a paper without the context

2019-10-30 06:29:24 UTC  

So you trust it with no knowledge?

2019-10-30 06:29:26 UTC  

What's the replicability rate of the GCTA?

2019-10-30 06:29:33 UTC  
2019-10-30 06:29:36 UTC  

@BabygottBach get in vc

2019-10-30 06:29:42 UTC  

ok but the environments are different so why are the twins performing the same across measures and studies @BabygottBach

2019-10-30 06:29:43 UTC  

I dont trust either side with no knowledge

2019-10-30 06:29:46 UTC  

can you please explain this to me

2019-10-30 06:29:55 UTC  

At this glance, it seems like there's a huge debate between two camps

2019-10-30 06:29:59 UTC  

I just want you to explain why the twins perform the same

2019-10-30 06:30:17 UTC  

Do you think parents treat twins exactly the same?

2019-10-30 06:30:25 UTC  

The overarching point is that there are variances and I don't give a fuck exactly how they exist 😆

2019-10-30 06:30:29 UTC  

Sociology TM

2019-10-30 06:30:37 UTC  

well, its consistent across all measures and studies

2019-10-30 06:30:38 UTC  

Look up the twin niching effect, @Nerthulas

2019-10-30 06:30:51 UTC  

but its consistent across ***all*** twin studies

2019-10-30 06:30:52 UTC  

Sexual reproduction causes the shuffling around (recombination) which breaks the epistasis so it actually isn't the death toll for heritability estimates or quantitative genetics

2019-10-30 06:30:54 UTC  

Maybe there's a consistent sociological effect, @Nerthulas?

2019-10-30 06:30:58 UTC  

if they didn't treat them the same, wouldn't that make them score differently?

2019-10-30 06:31:05 UTC  

A confounding sociological variable.

2019-10-30 06:31:05 UTC  

that's the opposit eof the claim

2019-10-30 06:31:12 UTC  

but its different from the other siblings @BabygottBach

2019-10-30 06:31:16 UTC  

"Parent may treat their twins differently by 1/10,000th of a degree, therefore ambiguity on heritability

2019-10-30 06:31:18 UTC  

lmao

2019-10-30 06:31:26 UTC  

so they are more alike to each other than to people they share environment with

2019-10-30 06:31:27 UTC  

omg you guys are still at it

2019-10-30 06:31:29 UTC  

can you explain this?

2019-10-30 06:31:36 UTC  

@TheUserNameofPeace, where's the evidence for how close the parents treat their twins?

2019-10-30 06:31:42 UTC  

It's pretty obvious actually considering we have been breeding animals and plants (and prob humans too) for over ten thousand years with great success

2019-10-30 06:31:46 UTC  

twin adoption studies

2019-10-30 06:31:47 UTC  
2019-10-30 06:31:56 UTC  

still score the same..

2019-10-30 06:32:05 UTC  

sociological effects