People who sit here and then chat with someone might get happier…but whether they sit here in the first place probably also depends on their personality and their baseline mood. Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash.
People who sit here and then chat with someone might get happier…but whether they sit here in the first place probably also depends on their personality and their baseline mood. Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash.

Why “nature plus nurture” is sometimes the wrong way to think

It’s common to try to explain things as either due to nature OR nurture.

Or, at best, we say: some percentage of the variation in outcome is due to genes, and some percentage is due to the environment. It’s important to remember, though, that outcomes can be a complex interaction between the two.


Consider this:

Our genetically-influenced traits impact what environments we seek out and find ourselves in.

For instance, risk-taking seems to have moderate heritability, and it influences career and life choices that change our environment.

A risk-taker is more likely to seek out riskier environments. And this choice of environment might itself depend on the opportunity set (i.e., current environment). In one environment, risk-taking might mean a greater likelihood of entrepreneurship; in another, it might mean crypto trading, and in a third, drug dealing.

Genetic propensities and the environment we are in can become intertwined.


Consider depression:

Depression seems to have a heritability in the 20%-60% range.

Some are unusually susceptible to it, others less so. Yet whether someone has a depressive episode or not may depend a lot on what environment they happen to be in.

With meaningful work, supportive friends, a robust exercise routine, and effective self-regulation strategies, even with a high propensity toward depression, you may be able to avoid it. On the other hand, if you’re unemployed, lonely, and without helpful routines, even with a low propensity toward depression, you may still become depressed.

So while it can be useful to think about the heritability of a trait, it is important to remember that heritable traits can influence what environment we end up in and that the interplay between genes, environment, and our habits/skills/strategies are what leads to outcomes.


So while it’s common to think in terms of:

(1) nature OR nurture

…or, at best… 

(2) an additive model: outcome = w * nature + (1-w) * nurture…

…Sometimes, a better model has an interaction term:

outcome = w1 * nature + w2* nurture + w3 * nature * nurture.


This was first written on April 28, 2021, and first appeared on this site on December 9, 2022.


  

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