▲ | wizzwizz4 4 days ago | |||||||
If you're calling g-factor "that which remains after you have eliminated all environmental factors", then you're not using the common definition. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G_factor_(psychometrics). To challenge your other assertion, I'll quote the article: > The measured value of this construct depends on the cognitive tasks that are used, and little is known about the underlying causes of the observed correlations. (We've had a lot of discussions of IQ on Hacker News. My observations suggest that everyone who supports it in more than 3 comments in the same thread is a scientific racist with a poor understanding of the research on IQ.) | ||||||||
▲ | nialse 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Working in psychometrics I’m in the somewhat conservative “g is simply shared variance of many tests measuring human abilities”-camp. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1412107?origin=crossref&seq=1 I’m not subscribing to the notion that g should be controlled for environment, quite the contrary, but if you do, what is left is the part of g which is genetics. EDIT: The bit of knowledge I have comes from being published in psychiatric epidemiology on the topic of cognitive impairment and substance use. | ||||||||
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