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News | May 23, 2020

Using genetics for social science. A review in Nature Human Behaviour

Philipp Koellinger (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) and co-author K. Paige Harden (University of Texas at Austin, United States) review advances and controversies in social science genetics and clarify how it can make valuable contributions to the unfolding conversation about the uses and abuses of human genomics.

Using genetics for social science. A review in Nature Human Behaviour

Harden, K.P., Koellinger, P.D. Using genetics for social science. Nature Human Behavior, (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-020-0862-5. Free link.

Abstract

Social science genetics is concerned with understanding whether, how and why genetic differences between human beings are linked to differences in behaviours and socioeconomic outcomes. Our review discusses the goals, methods, challenges and implications of this research endeavour. We survey how the recent developments in genetics are beginning to provide social scientists with a powerful new toolbox they can use to better understand environmental effects, and we illustrate this with several substantive examples. Furthermore, we examine how medical research can benefit from genetic insights into social-scientific outcomes and vice versa. Finally, we discuss the ethical challenges of this work and clarify several common misunderstandings and misinterpretations of genetic research on individual differences.