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Schizophrenia and Genetics: The End of an Illusion
By Jay Joseph
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We are approaching a period of crisis and reevaluation in the behavioral genetics and psychiatric genetics fields, as attempts to discover “genes for behavior” have, with possible rare exceptions, been unsuccessful. Schizophrenia is the most investigated psychiatric disorder, yet although there have been many claims of gene “association,” decades of molecular genetic studies have failed to produce a single causative gene. In an official 2013 press release, the American Psychiatric Association admitted that psychiatry and its psychiatric genetics subfield are “still waiting” for the identification of “biological and genetic markers” for psychiatric disorders. Although some gene discovery claims have appeared since then, psychiatry continues to “wait.”
In this context, psychologist Jay Joseph focuses on the methodological shortcomings and questionable assumptions of previous schizophrenia family, twin, and adoption studies. He shows that although genetic interpretations of schizophrenia twin studies are based on the assumption that reared-together monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs grow up experiencing similar (“equal”) behavior-influencing environments, this assumption is clearly false. He concludes that schizophrenia twin studies, like schizophrenia family studies, are unable to disentangle the potential impact of genetic and environmental influences. In both types of studies, therefore, the results can be explained entirely by non-genetic factors.
Turning to adoption research, Joseph puts the influential Danish-American adoption studies of the 1960s-1990s under the microscope, taking readers on a journey through massively flawed, biased, and environmentally confounded studies that have been presented in standard textbooks in a misleading manner since the 1970s. These texts have ignored or concealed methodological, factual, and even scientific-ethical flaws that, in addition to twin studies based on the false assumption that MZ and DZ environments are equal, call into question everything that we supposedly “know” about the genetics of schizophrenia. The authors of these texts often fail to mention studies that do not fit genetic explanations, while on occasion they cite studies that do not exist.
In contrast to the prevailing beliefs in the social and behavioral sciences, Joseph argues that there is little if any scientifically acceptable evidence that disordered genes play a role in causing schizophrenia. At the same time, he highlights the evidence in favor of environmental causes, while noting that the validity of the “schizophrenia” concept itself has a long history of controversy.
In this book, which brings together many of Joseph’s previous findings in one place while exploring many new areas, the main issues are approached from a refreshingly critical perspective. This stands in direct contrast to the cookie-cutter academic and journalistic accounts of the “genetics of schizophrenia” topic, where it is usually claimed that schizophrenia is a “highly heritable” disorder involving a disease process of the brain.
Joseph presents an up-to-date, thoroughly documented, and much needed critical evaluation of schizophrenia genetic research. His findings have important implications for psychiatry, behavioral genetics, and for the social and behavioral sciences in general. In addition, this work is essential reading for anyone interested in the longstanding “nature-nurture” question of whether human behavioral differences are caused mainly by hereditary or by environmental factors. Joseph concludes that the failure to discover genes for schizophrenia, psychosis, and other psychiatric conditions is not a scientific setback but is instead a cause for celebration, as society can now part ways with genetic diversions and medical approaches, and can focus on environmental causes, social interventions, non-medical treatment approaches, and prevention.
In this context, psychologist Jay Joseph focuses on the methodological shortcomings and questionable assumptions of previous schizophrenia family, twin, and adoption studies. He shows that although genetic interpretations of schizophrenia twin studies are based on the assumption that reared-together monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs grow up experiencing similar (“equal”) behavior-influencing environments, this assumption is clearly false. He concludes that schizophrenia twin studies, like schizophrenia family studies, are unable to disentangle the potential impact of genetic and environmental influences. In both types of studies, therefore, the results can be explained entirely by non-genetic factors.
Turning to adoption research, Joseph puts the influential Danish-American adoption studies of the 1960s-1990s under the microscope, taking readers on a journey through massively flawed, biased, and environmentally confounded studies that have been presented in standard textbooks in a misleading manner since the 1970s. These texts have ignored or concealed methodological, factual, and even scientific-ethical flaws that, in addition to twin studies based on the false assumption that MZ and DZ environments are equal, call into question everything that we supposedly “know” about the genetics of schizophrenia. The authors of these texts often fail to mention studies that do not fit genetic explanations, while on occasion they cite studies that do not exist.
In contrast to the prevailing beliefs in the social and behavioral sciences, Joseph argues that there is little if any scientifically acceptable evidence that disordered genes play a role in causing schizophrenia. At the same time, he highlights the evidence in favor of environmental causes, while noting that the validity of the “schizophrenia” concept itself has a long history of controversy.
In this book, which brings together many of Joseph’s previous findings in one place while exploring many new areas, the main issues are approached from a refreshingly critical perspective. This stands in direct contrast to the cookie-cutter academic and journalistic accounts of the “genetics of schizophrenia” topic, where it is usually claimed that schizophrenia is a “highly heritable” disorder involving a disease process of the brain.
Joseph presents an up-to-date, thoroughly documented, and much needed critical evaluation of schizophrenia genetic research. His findings have important implications for psychiatry, behavioral genetics, and for the social and behavioral sciences in general. In addition, this work is essential reading for anyone interested in the longstanding “nature-nurture” question of whether human behavioral differences are caused mainly by hereditary or by environmental factors. Joseph concludes that the failure to discover genes for schizophrenia, psychosis, and other psychiatric conditions is not a scientific setback but is instead a cause for celebration, as society can now part ways with genetic diversions and medical approaches, and can focus on environmental causes, social interventions, non-medical treatment approaches, and prevention.
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Jay Joseph
Jay Joseph, a teacher by profession, has lived and worked in various parts of the world. The Gospel According to Zachariah is his second book of fiction. His passions, in addition to reading and writing, are people, animals and plants. He currently lives in Northeast London with his family and teaches in a local school.
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