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Many of the critics of the methods we are to describe argue
that, for twin studies at least, the so-called traditional
methods such as taking the difference between the MZ and DZ
correlations and doubling it as a heritability estimate give much
the same answer as the more sophisticated methods taught here.
In the final analysis, it must be up to history and the consumer
to decide, but in our experience there are several reasons for
choosing the methods presented here. First, as we have already shown,
the puzzle of human variation extends far beyond testing whether
genes play any role in variation. The subtleties of the
environment and the varieties of gene action call for methods
that can integrate many more types of data and test more complex
hypotheses than were envisioned fifty or a hundred years ago.
Only a model building/model fitting strategy allows us to trace
the implications of a theory across all kinds of data and to test
systematically for the consistency of theory and observation.
But even if the skeptic is left in doubt by the methods proposed
for the interpretation of variables considered
individually, we believe that the conventional approaches of fifty
years ago pale utterly once we want to analyze the
genetic and environmental causes of correlation between
variables.
The genetic analysis of multiple variables will occupy many of the succeeding
chapters, so here it is sufficient to preview the main issues. There are three
kinds of ``multivariate'' questions which are generic issues in genetic
epidemiology, although we shall address
them in the context of the twin study. Each is outlined briefly.
Subsections
Next: 1 Contribution of Genes
Up: 1 The Scope of
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Jeff Lessem
2002-03-21