Most Reported Genetic Associations With General Intelligence Are Probably False Positives

Author:

Chabris Christopher F.1,Hebert Benjamin M.2,Benjamin Daniel J.3,Beauchamp Jonathan2,Cesarini David4,van der Loos Matthijs5,Johannesson Magnus6,Magnusson Patrik K. E.7,Lichtenstein Paul7,Atwood Craig S.8,Freese Jeremy9,Hauser Taissa S.10,Hauser Robert M.10,Christakis Nicholas1112,Laibson David2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Union College

2. Department of Economics, Harvard University

3. Department of Economics, Cornell University

4. Department of Economics, New York University

5. Department of Applied Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam

6. Stockholm School of Economics

7. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet

8. Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Medicine and Public Health

9. Department of Sociology, Northwestern University

10. Center for Demography of Health and Aging, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–Madison

11. Department of Sociology, Harvard University

12. Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Abstract

General intelligence ( g) and virtually all other behavioral traits are heritable. Associations between g and specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in several candidate genes involved in brain function have been reported. We sought to replicate published associations between g and 12 specific genetic variants (in the genes DTNBP1, CTSD, DRD2, ANKK1, CHRM2, SSADH, COMT, BDNF, CHRNA4, DISC1, APOE, and SNAP25) using data sets from three independent, well-characterized longitudinal studies with samples of 5,571, 1,759, and 2,441 individuals. Of 32 independent tests across all three data sets, only 1 was nominally significant. By contrast, power analyses showed that we should have expected 10 to 15 significant associations, given reasonable assumptions for genotype effect sizes. For positive controls, we confirmed accepted genetic associations for Alzheimer’s disease and body mass index, and we used SNP-based calculations of genetic relatedness to replicate previous estimates that about half of the variance in g is accounted for by common genetic variation among individuals. We conclude that the molecular genetics of psychology and social science requires approaches that go beyond the examination of candidate genes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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