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All Brains Are the Same Color
By RICHARD E. NISBETT
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/opinion/09nisbett.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&ref=opinion
Ann Arbor, Mich.

JAMES WATSON, the 1962 Nobel laureate, recently asserted that he was
“inherently gloomy about the prospect of Africa” and its citizens
because “all our social policies are based on the fact that their
intelligence is the same as ours — whereas all the testing says not really.”

Dr. Watson’s remarks created a huge stir because they implied that
blacks were genetically inferior to whites, and the controversy resulted
in his resignation as chancellor of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. But
was he right? Is there a genetic difference between blacks and whites
that condemns blacks in perpetuity to be less intelligent?

The first notable public airing of the scientific question came in a
1969 article in The Harvard Educational Review by Arthur Jensen, a
psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Jensen
maintained that a 15-point difference in I.Q. between blacks and whites
was mostly due to a genetic difference between the races that could
never be erased. But his argument gave a misleading account of the
evidence. And others who later made the same argument — Richard
Herrnstein and Charles Murray in “The Bell Curve,” in 1994, for example,
and just recently, William Saletan in a series of articles on Slate —
have made the same mistake.

In fact, the evidence heavily favors the view that race differences in
I.Q. are environmental in origin, not genetic.

The hereditarians begin with the assertion that 60 percent to 80 percent
of variation in I.Q. is genetically determined. However, most estimates
of heritability have been based almost exclusively on studies of
middle-class groups. For the poor, a group that includes a substantial
proportion of minorities, heritability of I.Q. is very low, in the range
of 10 percent to 20 percent, according to recent research by Eric
Turkheimer at the University of Virginia. This means that for the poor,
improvements in environment have great potential to bring about
increases in I.Q.

In any case, the degree of heritability of a characteristic tells us
nothing about how much the environment can affect it. Even when a trait
is highly heritable (think of the height of corn plants), modifiability
can also be great (think of the difference growing conditions can make).

Nearly all the evidence suggesting a genetic basis for the I.Q.
differential is indirect. There is, for example, the evidence that brain
size is correlated with intelligence, and that blacks have smaller
brains than whites. But the brain size difference between men and women
is substantially greater than that between blacks and whites, yet men
and women score the same, on average, on I.Q. tests. Likewise, a group
of people in a community in Ecuador have a genetic anomaly that produces
extremely small head sizes — and hence brain sizes. Yet their
intelligence is as high as that of their unaffected relatives.

Why rely on such misleading and indirect findings when we have much more
direct evidence about the basis for the I.Q. gap? About 25 percent of
the genes in the American black population are European, meaning that
the genes of any individual can range from 100 percent African to mostly
European. If European intelligence genes are superior, then blacks who
have relatively more European genes ought to have higher I.Q.’s than
those who have more African genes. But it turns out that skin color and
“negroidness” of features — both measures of the degree of a black
person’s European ancestry — are only weakly associated with I.Q. (even
though we might well expect a moderately high association due to the
social advantages of such features).

During World War II, both black and white American soldiers fathered
children with German women. Thus some of these children had 100 percent
European heritage and some had substantial African heritage. Tested in
later childhood, the German children of the white fathers were found to
have an average I.Q. of 97, and those of the black fathers had an
average of 96.5, a trivial difference.

If European genes conferred an advantage, we would expect that the
smartest blacks would have substantial European heritage. But when a
group of investigators sought out the very brightest black children in
the Chicago school system and asked them about the race of their parents
and grandparents, these children were found to have no greater degree of
European ancestry than blacks in the population at large.

Most tellingly, blood-typing tests have been used to assess the degree
to which black individuals have European genes. The blood group assays
show no association between degree of European heritage and I.Q.
Similarly, the blood groups most closely associated with high
intellectual performance among blacks are no more European in origin
than other blood groups.

The closest thing to direct evidence that the hereditarians have is a
study from the 1970s showing that black children who had been adopted by
white parents had lower I.Q.’s than those of mixed-race children adopted
by white parents. But, as the researchers acknowledged, the study had
many flaws; for instance, the black children had been adopted at a
substantially later age than the mixed-race children, and later age at
adoption is associated with lower I.Q.

A superior adoption study — and one not discussed by the hereditarians —
was carried out at Arizona State University by the psychologist Elsie
Moore, who looked at black and mixed-race children adopted by
middle-class families, either black or white, and found no difference in
I.Q. between the black and mixed-race children. Most telling is Dr.
Moore’s finding that children adopted by white families had I.Q.’s 13
points higher than those of children adopted by black families. The
environments that even middle-class black children grow up in are not as
favorable for the development of I.Q. as those of middle-class whites.

Important recent psychological research helps to pinpoint just what
factors shape differences in I.Q. scores. Joseph Fagan of Case Western
Reserve University and Cynthia Holland of Cuyahoga Community College
tested blacks and whites on their knowledge of, and their ability to
learn and reason with, words and concepts. The whites had substantially
more knowledge of the various words and concepts, but when participants
were tested on their ability to learn new words, either from dictionary
definitions or by learning their meaning in context, the blacks did just
as well as the whites.

Whites showed better comprehension of sayings, better ability to
recognize similarities and better facility with analogies — when
solutions required knowledge of words and concepts that were more likely
to be known to whites than to blacks. But when these kinds of reasoning
were tested with words and concepts known equally well to blacks and
whites, there were no differences. Within each race, prior knowledge
predicted learning and reasoning, but between the races it was prior
knowledge only that differed.

What do we know about the effects of environment?

That environment can markedly influence I.Q. is demonstrated by the
so-called Flynn Effect. James Flynn, a philosopher and I.Q. researcher
in New Zealand, has established that in the Western world as a whole,
I.Q. increased markedly from 1947 to 2002. In the United States alone,
it went up by 18 points. Our genes could not have changed enough over
such a brief period to account for the shift; it must have been the
result of powerful social factors. And if such factors could produce
changes over time for the population as a whole, they could also produce
big differences between subpopulations at any given time.

In fact, we know that the I.Q. difference between black and white
12-year-olds has dropped to 9.5 points from 15 points in the last 30
years — a period that was more favorable for blacks in many ways than
the preceding era. Black progress on the National Assessment of
Educational Progress shows equivalent gains. Reading and math
improvement has been modest for whites but substantial for blacks.

Most important, we know that interventions at every age from infancy to
college can reduce racial gaps in both I.Q. and academic achievement,
sometimes by substantial amounts in surprisingly little time. This
mutability is further evidence that the I.Q. difference has
environmental, not genetic, causes. And it should encourage us, as a
society, to see that all children receive ample opportunity to develop
their minds.

Richard E. Nisbett, a professor of psychology at the University of
Michigan, is the author of “The Geography of Thought: How Asians and
Westerners Think Differently and Why.”





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