Talk:Race and genetics/Archive 2

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Zara-arush in topic Bauchet European Clusters Map

The section on "race and behavior" edit

Seems to provide little in correlating the relationship ,if any, between Race & Behavior. Granted Linnaeus has had a profound impacted in his field, and science as a whole. In this case though, i don't know if his opinions necessarily belong because they might give the impression that this is all that could be said on the subject.Archcog 16:45, 7 October 2007 (UTC)archcog 12:40PM, October, 07,2007.Reply

To me the article's section on nature v nurture does on good job of pointing out factors that influence human behavior. So it now seems to me the section on race and behavior might be redundant. Maybe a merger of the 2 sections?Archcog 16:45, 7 October 2007 (UTC)archcog 12:40PM, October, 07,2007.Reply

Disputed section edit

See Talk:White_American#Admixture_section_is_a_can_of_worms Savignac 08:49, 6 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Section on Blood proteins and molecular evolution edit

As I was reading this article, and being irresistably drawn to edit some of the less than clear sentences, I came to this section, which is very different in the published version from the version one gets when one tries to edit it. After footnote indicator [10], the published page has the sentence beginning "When scientist (sic, you see why I am editing!) began studying global mitochondrial DNA ..." The edit page includes several paragraphs which seem to be left out of the published page, as follows:

Block quote


Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza and Anthony Edwards would then incorporate these techniques into the field of population genetics. Using computer based statistical analysis to average across the several blood group systems, they were able to produce a phylogenetic relationship of the various populations around the worldCite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). When scientist began studying global mitochondrial DNA sequences they identified 33 mitochondrial DNA clans, 13 were from Africa. Though Africa had only 12% of the worlds population it had 40% of the maternal clans. As a rule of thumb for any species the region of greatest diversity is usually the region of origin.

Studies using Mitochondrial DNA have found that all humans today are descended from one woman, named Mitochondrial Eve, who may have lived in Africa some 150,000 years ago. Since Mitochondrial Eve 7500 generations have passed, and since the first split between Africans and non Africans, 2500 generations have passed. This would explain why human genetic diversity is relatively low compared to species that have existed for much longer.

end of block quote

This seems to be informative stuff, and to accurately convey information from The Human Genome Project, although it does need improvements of style. However, I can't seem to work on it -- changes I make don't appear in the published page.

I will sign my name, because I'm having trouble logging in, even though I do have an account. Janice Vian 161.184.44.10 (talk) 02:39, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

A similar thing just happened in this talk page, in that three paragraphs of the five paragraph block quote I tried to place here, did not appear. jvian@telusplanet.net 161.184.44.10 (talk) 02:54, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Try opening an account. Muntuwandi (talk) 03:07, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

As I was reading this article, I noticed a statement that went against my prior ideas. "People from the Indian subcontinent are classified as Caucasian but some have dark skin."

I personally can tell you that People Frome the Indian Subcontinent are NOT classified as Caucasians. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Kabir Singh 2 (talkcontribs) 15:02, 21 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I added a few tags to the first sections edit

I wanted to explain why I added a few tags to the first sections of the article. First, much of the material in those sections isn't cited, therefore citations need to be aded for those affirmations. Second, two statements seem to be particularly dubious: one of which seems to insinuate that anthropologists, especially physical anthropologists, believe in the reality of biological races of man, and that this opinion is better than the opinion of sociologists. A survey conducted in 1999 (results found in Lieberman: How "Caucasoids" Got Such Big Crania and Why They Shrank[1]) says exactly the contrary: about 80% of anthropologists now disbelieve the reality of races. Then, there is this statement that there are societies that "live in the stone age even today in the 21st century). I would daresay that with today's pervasive technology, this affirmation is patently false, even for very small groups in the remotest parts of the world. I wanted to generate some discussion on these before I went and corrected these statements myself.--Ramdrake (talk) 12:11, 23 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I'm a bit concerned that this article has strayed far away from a discussion of genetics. Dbachman noted a little while ago that about half this article discusses "Race" in a general sense and has little to do with genetics.[2] I can't help but agree with him. Muntuwandi significantly changed this article in the Summer, and looking at the two versions the current version is very much poorer. This article seems to have become a proxy article for discussing "Race" in general. I suggest we go back to focussing on genetics, there is no place in this article for speculation about "Race and intelligence" or "Race and behaviour", to pick two section at random. This article should be about "Race and genetics". Take a look at the pre Muntuwandi version here, it concentrates on genetics and "Race" and human variation, not on concepts like "ethnocentricism". Dbachman thinks this has become a coatrack article, and I can't help but think he is spot on. Let's get it back to the subject at hand shall we. I suggest we start by working on the pre-Muntuwandi article, his changes were massive and were done at a time when Wikipedia is always slow, during the Summer. I value his contributions, but he has strayed very far from the subject of this article, and has removed a great deal of valuable cited material. Alun (talk) 05:24, 24 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
I still think that it is quite difficult to completely separate other aspects of race such as intelligence and behavior from genetics. Much of the motivation in this field has been to find not only genes that account for differences in physical appearance or anatomy but also whether there are any genes that account for differences in intelligence or behavior. Without these issues, there would be no motivation to study alleged "racial differences".Muntuwandi (talk) 03:51, 25 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
We don't have to completely separate them, but the point is that this article is about "race and genetics", so it should concentrate on how genetics has been used in anthropology, human biology and human classification. The "genetics of intelligence" has got nothing to do with the "genetics of race", discussion of "intelligence" is a question for psychology and not "genetics" or "race", the link between cognitive ability and genetics is completely opaque and seems to be irrelevant to any discussion about "race". The "genetics of behaviour" is again irrelevant, no one knows how much behaviour is learned or how much is inherited, but when I was a genetics undergraduate, many years ago, most geneticists were sceptical that any great proportion of behaviour was genetic in humans, our bahaviour is far too complex to be very much based on genetics, we are rational organisms after all, and so any bahaviour based on reasoning is learned. Even if one wanted to accept that some behaviour is genetic, then how is this relevant to "race"? The point is this, an article about "Race and genetics" should concentrate on what genetics can tell us about race, and not on what genetics can tell us about "intelligence" (nothing) or behaviour (nothing). This article is not about the "motivation for studying racial differences", it is about "race and genetics". Mostly research into genetics doesn't support any subspecific classification of the human species, usually this is explained by the fact that we are all too similar. This is what we should be discussing, what are the observable differences between human populations, are there discrete genetic populations, if so are they equivalent to "races", what is their distribution? What are the bondaries between these groups? Is the distribution of variation clinal? If so does the discontinuous sampling of this variation lead to a false impression of discontinuity? What do geneticists and molecular anthropologists tell us about human genetic variation and it's distribution? This article was far from good before the summer, but it was more detailed and there was greater depth. Many of the changes you introduced were good, and I would like to keep them, while also re-introducing many of the important things you removed. On the other hand there are quite a lot of sections that you included that I really do think are irrelevant, and are possibly pov-forks from other articles. We should work to bring the best of both versions together, while abandoning the worst sections. I'll have a think about what I want to keep and let you know. I'm sure we can work together to make this a better article. All the best. Alun (talk) 08:16, 27 November 2007 (UTC)Reply


Human genetic variation edit

We have this article about "race and genetics" and another about Human genetic variation. I am increasingly under the impression that we need only the article about human genetic variation. In that article we should have a general discussion of how human genetic variation is distributed, whether it is distributed into discrete packages we can call "races" is part of the scope of an article that discusses this variation, so I think this article called #race and genetics" is generally redundant. The article could then discuss:

  • Within-between group variation (FST).
  • Founder effects and genetic drift.
  • Selection.
  • Clustering analyses.
  • Dilution effects seen as populations get further from Africa.
  • Haplotypes.
  • Molecular lineages.
  • other stuff I have forgotten.

Any thoughts? Alun (talk) 11:14, 9 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

--Why not just go for it? --RebekahThorn (talk) 13:27, 20 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

Of interest edit

Geneticists have found the ancestor from whom all variations in hair and eye colour came from. This single individual lived somewhere on the northwest coast of the Black Sea some 8,000 years ago. Prior to this mutation everyone had similar eye and hair colour. As it has no genetic advantage it is still unknown how the mutation spread. The research is to be published in the journal "Human Genetics" soon. Wayne (talk) 08:43, 2 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

How interesting. Presumably we are talking about genetic drift in that case. Of course they cannot have found the ancestor though, this "individual" (if it was a single person) must be long dead, but presumably they can attempt to trace their origin and approximate age using standard genetic dating estimates? Does sound like a cool article though, will keep an eye out for it. Where did you get this information? Do you know the name of the upcoming article? All the best. Alun (talk) 17:50, 2 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • I also read about this article to be published in the Human Genetics journal: News article about it here. Epf (talk) 18:00, 2 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
I got the info from an article in my local newspaper which wasn't online which is why I gave no link. It was much more detailed than that MSN article (i'm at a loss as to why MSN only mentions eyes). For example the mutant OCA2 switch is apparently also responsible for hair colours other than brown (blonde, red, brunette etc). And most significantly is responsible for olive and fair skin tones. Significant as it makes skin colour even less relevant to race if it is only 8,000 years old. The study will make a good addition to this article when it comes out. Wayne (talk) 18:17, 2 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Bad. edit

I just wanted to say this and many other science articles here are very badly written. Many of the statements in this article and some other race-related articles are not even sentences. Wikipedia needs more editors concerned with prose style. 129.15.107.106 (talk) 03:39, 7 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

The article is really terrible. A total mess. Centrum99 (talk) 01:55, 19 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

coatrack tag edit

i agree with the editors that placed the coatrack tag on this article; very little of it is actually related to race and genetics. i have cut the worst-offending sections out, but there is still much work to be done. Calliopejen1 (talk) 22:04, 10 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

The article should probably be redirected to Human genetic variation. That areticle needs quite a lot of work, but should be a good starting point to discuss how genetic variation is distributed within the human species. There is quite a lot of information in the Race (classification of human beings) article that could be used for the human genetic variation article. On the one hand, some geneticists do use the term "race" when they discuss human genetic variation, but it should be born in mind that their use of this term is disputed by a great many other geneticists and by molecular anthropologists. It should also be born in mind that many genticists who do use the word "race" do not use it in the sense of classification so much as in the sense of genetic variation as it can be measured. Take for example Armand Leroi, he uses the term "race", but an examination of his use of the word indicates that there could be any number of "races", even hundreds or thousands, because he acknowledges that a "race", as some geneticists use the term, is really only an acknowledgement of the fact of diversity. Indeed he is using the term much as Theodosius Dobzhansky proposed, to identify any genetically distinct population. Leroy states

Yet there is nothing very fundamental about the concept of the major continental races; they're just the easiest way to divide things up. Study enough genes in enough people and one could sort the world's population into 10, 100, perhaps 1,000 groups, each located somewhere on the map. This has not yet been done with any precision, but it will be. Soon it may be possible to identify your ancestors not merely as African or European, but Ibo or Yoruba, perhaps even Celt or Castilian, or all of the above.[3]

But this is clearly not support for the concept of fundamental or universal "types" of humans, as "race" is so often portrayed, it is simply using the term "race" to describe human genetic variation. Alan Goodman, a biological anthropologist calls Leroy a de facto believer. He states that there are the true believers

On one end stand scientific “true believers” who treat races as natural entities. The primary difference between this position and racial typologists of the early 19th century is that 21st century scientists assert that evolution, rather than god, created “races.” These racial “true believers” include evolutionary anthropologists Vince Sarich (Sarich and Miele, 2004) and psychologist J. P. Rushton (1995), now the president of the Pioneer Fund...On the other end of the spectrum are the “de facto believers,” an otherwise respectable group of scientists that encompasses Leroi. What separates this group from the true believers is that they understand races as statistical approximations rather than natural types, asserting race as a de facto stand-in for the messy patterns of human biological variation. Sally Satel (2002), for example, the author of a prior New York Times piece titled “I am a Racially Profiling Doctor,” concurs that humans do not vary much genetically and race is a crude approximation of this human variation. She goes on to say that race might not be necessary in a near future of individualized genetic analysis. According to the “de facto believers” of race, we are merely passing through an awkward adolescent phase in which we still need to racialize human variation.[4]

Many editors with a POV to push will deliberately attempt to conflate these two distinct positions, by claiming that a specific scientists (such as Leroy for example) has stated that "race" is real, but they will attempt to hide the fact that what people like Leroy, and indeed Neil Risch or Noah Rosenberg are doing is not discussing historical concepts of "race". For example Rosenberg never uses the term "race" in his science, and discusses only population structure, but many editors have still attempted to use his work to push a racialist pov, which of course amounts at best to a synthesis.
Personally I think that this version of the article is better, but it could still do with a lot of work to make it more coherent and readable. On the other hand I tend to think that a redirect to the Human genetic variation article would be the best course for this article. The debate about the geographic distribution of human genetic variation and it's implications more properly belongs there. Alun (talk) 07:11, 15 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Human genetic variation edit

The two references below show that the previous estimate of 0.1% human genetic variation and 99.9% similarity was too low (as shown in this section[5]). There is at least 0.5% human genetic variation and about 99.5% similarity: [6] [7]
The information in the article needs to be updated to reflect this new information. --Fat Cigar (talk) 12:26, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

More sources: [8][9][10] --Fat Cigar (talk) 02:23, 1 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
It is really quite arbitrary how genetic variation is measured. There are various ways to measure it, and all give different estimates because all are giving measures of different things. It's not a question of what is the "correct" figure, that's a meaningless idea, and it's not a question of a new estimate being "better" than any previous estimate, it's a question of the utility of these measurements. For example the o.1% estimate is meaningless on it's own, where it becomes handy is when we use it to compare similar estimates from other large mammalian species, then we can compare the nucleotide diversity (the 0.1% estimate) from humans with that of other species, and it allows us to compare how genetically homogeneous our species is compared to other species. Usually such comparisons show that human diversity is low compared to other species. It would be inappropriate to claim that genetic diversity is higher in humans at the nucleotide level than was previously thought, because it would be wrong. If one were to compare the nucleotide diversity of a different species with the "new" estimate for variation within the human species, then that would be an incorrect comparison. These issues need to be taken into account. Obviously we know a great deal more about the human genome than we do for most other mammals, we can only compare the diversity at the CNV level in humans with the same measurement in other species. While what you are saying is correct, please be aware that when an article is discussing comparisons of nucleotide diversity between species one should not use the "new" estimate of diversity for the human species, or we would be comparing apples and oranges, it would also clearly represent original research. Thanks for taking this into consideration. Alun (talk) 17:10, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I have attempted to make the section more accurate. --Fat Cigar 18:45, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
OK, nice work. Alun (talk) 19:01, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
"Usually such comparisons show that human diversity is low compared to other species." It is a lie. And you know it very well, Mr. Liar, although you may suppress this fact in your subconsciousness. 89.235.19.212 (talk) 09:17, 7 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Genetic variation table edit

The table lists four classifications Europe, East Asia, Oceania, and America. I'm just wondering where does the western part of Asia fit into these classifications. If it is being grouped under Europe then it should be labeled as such, or was such a massive population group omitted altogether? (MJDTed (talk) 22:56, 18 October 2008 (UTC))Reply

Since genetic variation is continuous, populations such as those of western asia will likely fall somewhere in between East Asia and Europe. I would assume it was the intent of the study to use populations that are separated by large geographic distances. Shambalala (talk) 01:12, 19 October 2008 (UTC)Reply
Then it should be made clear, otherwise it's misleading. For instance in the section it infers from the table that Europeans are genetically closest to Africans when logically one would assume that Arabic populations by proximity will be genetically closest, assuming there is a genetic continuum. It also says that the contributions to Europe are 2/3rds from Asia, are we still to referring to East Asia here? The table as it is in my opinion without further explanation is overly simplistic.(MJDTed (talk) 09:17, 19 October 2008 (UTC))Reply
Admixed populations were omitted for the sake of simplicity. Otherwise the analysis would too complicated for the typical reader.Shambalala (talk) 02:17, 20 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Asian influence in Europe. edit

I have noticed a highly suspicious trend in race and genetics related articles to try and hide and delete the fact that the Asian influence is significant in some parts of Northern Europe, especially in parts of Scandinavia and the Baltic. Look how Y-Chromosome genetic markers from Asia are very common in some parts of Northern Europe.

See: http://www.scs.uiuc.edu/~mcdonald/WorldHaplogroupsMaps.pdf

In fact, this is the main reason why Finns cluster a bit apart from other Europeans (and of course this fact should not be exaggerated either) in recent autosomal studies. See:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/13/science/13visual.html?_r=3&ref=science&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

As said, these facts should not be exaggerated, but it is a fact that the largest non-Caucasian element in Europe is in some parts of Northern Europe, the Baltic and Eastern Europe, due to the Asian influence.

It is, at least, pretty strange that this fact is being constantly ignored and deleted in race related article in Wiki, this article included. I hope this will no longer be the case and these data included. Only racist motivated reasons can be behind these facts, and as we all know, the Nordicist-Nazi-White Supremacist tradition, very active in Internet and who are very worried in trying to present themselves as very pure whites, even genetically speaking. They are especially unconfortable with the fact that Finns have among the highest percentage in Europe of blond hair and blue eyes, while they happen to have the highest percentage of Non-Caucasian genes. This maybe one of the reasons for their behaviour, since they may think it endangers their myths and propaganda. But I wonder about the majority of users here? Because I bet that most people who know something about genetics here know about this fact, but they are still happy with all these versions ignoring and hiding these data. Very suspicious, indeed. Jan. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.144.235.20 (talk) 18:59, 26 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Are you referring to haplogroup N when talking about Asians? I believe the Finns and the Saami have always been assaulted for being predominantly brachycephalic, one may view N as the source of the Baltid type (as opposed to Nordid). One has to say that there are two camps among the "racists": one places more emphasis on pigmentation (its proponents are usually Northern, Central, and Eastern European), and the other camp which stresses cranial measures, likening Nordids to Mediterranids (mostly Southern Europeans). Since pigmentation is generally more distinctive, and possibly because non-European haplogroups like J and E3b are more common among South Europeans than haplogroup N is among North-Eastern Europeans, the former enjoys better recognition worldwide. However, it is fruitless to assign such point of view to the Nazis, who actually used the Baltid sub-race as a reason to discriminate against Poles and Russians. "Nordicism" would really be a misnomer here, since they were, in fact, more aggressive towards Baltids than towards the swarthier Mediterranids or Dinarids. --Humanophage (talk) 17:07, 6 February 2009 (UTC)Reply


Pathetic quotations edit

"Research published in July 2008 concludes that there is no race. A Scientific American article entitled "Traces of a Distant Past" by Gary Stix has the most interesting quote: "Genetic literacy will let a term like "Asian" or "Chinese" be replaced by more subtle classifications based on the differences in ancestral genetic makeup found in recent genome-wide scans, such as the distinction between China's southern and northern Han groups. "There is no race."Quintana-Murci says."


Who does take these clowns seriously? Their mystifications are being demolished by new and new clustering studies, and they repeat the opposite like blockheaded parrots. 89.235.19.212 (talk) 09:10, 7 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Since no source was given for that quote, I've removed it. If anyone wishes to put it back, they'll need to find a citation for it, and also demonstrate that it's notable enough to be included. --Captain Occam (talk) 00:02, 4 July 2009 (UTC)Reply


Bauchet European Clusters Map edit

Please, reply, why the file File:Bauchet European clusters.png is not desplayed? Is it possible to recover it? Thanks in advance, --Zara-arush (talk) 22:16, 5 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

2/3 Asian, 1/3 African edit

Yet again, Cavalli-Sforza is being misquoted to say Europeans are simply a mixture of or originated as a mixture of East Asian and African populations. The actual statement is just that with one dataset Cavalli-Sforza used an artificial interpolation between Asian and African values winds up slightly less distant from European values than either the Asian or African starting points. This only means that there has been some diffusion of genes over time and that genetic distance very roughly correlates with geographic distance. It says nothing about origins. Please remove this statement from the article. --JWB (talk) 17:35, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply