Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 I took the liberty of passing on our recent discussions on Race and Performance to Jon Entine. This is Jon Entine's response: [ Mel Siff Commentary: Jon Entine in several places has misinterpreted or taken out of context my remarks that it would take me ages to comment on every single point of dissension. He even implies that I suggested that a single gene or single underlying factor is responsible for differences in human performance. On the contrary, I clearly stated that multiple interacting factors concern the situation and, despite his fascinating observations and theories, no optimal combination of the underlying factors has ever been even propounded in his thesis. His useful summary simply reiterates what is fairly commonly known about genetics and race, but he has not yet addressed the central issue of which physiological and anthropometric features explain why " West Africans " currently are dominating the short sprints. He is suggesting that I am asking to see proof of exactly which gene or two is responsible for the differences - that really is not what I stated - I have constantly been asking for a helpful quantitative listing of which physical, physiological, biomechanical and other functional characteristics enable " West Africans " to dominate the sprints. If such a list can be produced, then it should also help identify which other athletes of other ethnic groups may also become elite sprinters. I even suggested possible features such as limb length ratios, tissue material differences, neural differences, etc, but he has focusing predominantly on the issue of race. I am far more concerned about which physical and physiological characteristics determine superiority in sporting events, not in the demeaning and tragic world of racial superiority or inferiority in any field of endeavour. Take for example, this comment: " if Dr. Siff continues to insist that the ancestral origins of 99.9% of the American black population is unknown, there are plenty of historical studies on this. " I am very well aware of the historical origins of black folk who were forcibly removed from Africa and, while this may be suggestive that they come from a background of genetic homogeneity, he has not furnished the results of genetic studies carried out on large populations of the black diaspora and the indigenous Africans. A later study may one day reveal such genetic " purity " , but at this stage it is unscientific to imply that historicity and genetics are synonymous. Then there is this remark: " Is Dr. Siff arguing that the above empirical facts can be explained (or explained away) by social and cultural factors? " He clearly failed to pay attention to the key features of my critique. I frequently and clearly focused on the possible combination of all possible contributing factors, including social, psychological and cultural, but most specifically the optimal combination of physiological and kinanthropometric factors which the apparently advantageous " West African " genes have produced. Regrettably, every time that I question this Race and Performance issue, the persons involved in the debate invariably focus on race rather than the actual genetic expression which appears in the form of physical performance in specific type of running. I have seen some comments on muscle fibre difference and limited aspects of physical structure, but these features are not exclusive to " West African " sprinters. I have not yet seen a study which has examined " West African " and other elite sprinters to learn which structural and functional characteristics distinguish the top sprinters from less elite sprinters and then to what degree these same characteristics are especially dominant among the " West African " sprinters. Maybe Jon Entine could supply such a list. It is one thing proposing a theory, but it is another thing producing convincing proof thereof. Someone, for example, can state that all the historical evidence and performance results show that those of Slavic or " Eastern European " descent by far have dominated weightlifting for decades, but it is entirely another thing substantiating this observation. Similarly for " West Africans " and the short sprints. In the case of weightlifting, a little deeper scrutiny shows that there is also a trend among those of Middle Eastern descent also to excel in weightlifting - is this now suggesting that there are certain physical and physiological characteristics which play a major role in explaining excellence in weightlifting - and that other specific aggregates of such characteristics may also explain why " West African " currently dominate sprinting? THAT, and not the attendant racial issues, is what attracts my attention. As Entine has correctly pointed out, the human genome project has shown how very much more complex the issue is than mere single gene explanations and how the complexity of this field can readily be misunderstood and misapplied. That is why, for the meantime at least, we need to focus on those features that can be far more easily measured and correlated with human performance. So, let's see some dedicated scientists undertake the far less daunting task of analysing a large sample of elite sprinters to ascertain if there indeed are some structural and functional characteristics which determine why " West Africans " currently are such excellent sprinters. We can delve far deeper into the genetics of this when our science has developed adequately to address this huge task. Maybe Jon Entine can already supply such a comparative physical, biomechanical and physiological study. If so, I would be delighted to see it. ] ----------------------------------------- It's hard to know what Siff is contending. If he is saying that the specific genetics of these trends are not fully understood, than of course he is right. If however, he contends that the general thesis that specific populations cannot be linked to body type/physiological profiles and success in certain sports, than he is well outside the mainstream in genetics, anthropology and sports science. Consider what Pulitzer Prize winning UCLA physiologist Diamond wrote about blacks in basketball: He writes that the disproportionate representation of African Americans is not because of a lack of socio-economic opportunities, but because of " the prevalent body shapes of some black African groups. " In a nutshell--with the added ingredients of physiological patterns-- that's the only contention of Taboo--it's totally unassailable, unless one wants to ignore basic science as well as mounds of empirical evidence. Of course, Dr. Siff is welcome to his perspective, but science works by forming hypothesis and testing them against the empirical evidence. Certainly, correlation is not causation, but opinion is not causation either. If you can't or won't discuss the scientific evidence, than all we are left with is opinion. I challenge Dr. Siff to address the following empirical facts and come up with a reasonable scientific hypothesis that comports with the evidence of anatomical and physiological patterns among populations documented (consistently) in hundreds of studies: --the top 220 and 494 of 500 all time 100 metre times are held by athletes of primarily West African ancestry (btw, if Dr. Siff continues to insist that the ancestral origins of 99.9% of the American black population is unknown, there are plenty of historical studies on this...there is no debate about this in the historical literature--they are of West African ancestry). --There are no elite distance runners of West African ancestry. --There are no elite sprinters of East African ancestry, despite 100 years of attempts to develop them. --There are more elite sprinters from Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon, Nigeria--any one of these countries--than there are from all of Asia, Europe, and the Americas combined, save for athletes from those areas of primarily West African origin. Is Dr. Siff arguing that the above empirical facts can be explained (or explained away) by social and cultural factors? If so, I think we would all like to read his explanation of the social and cultural factors at work. He would then have a hypothesis that others could evaluate. Short of that, he is engaging in puffery, not critical thinking. For your interest and to the point of how developed the science is in this area, and how relevant Taboo is in discussing them, I've attached a review of Taboo by Tim Noakes which appeared in the South African Medical Journal (it's in TIF format). I think Tim has credibility in this area, certainly. Tim was an advisor on Taboo and teaches the book. (A list of the board of advisors, who carefully read Taboo, and others who commented on it before publication, can be found at: http://www.jonentine.com/board.html Certainly there are specifics to be unraveled going forward, but the main thesis of Taboo and not controversial. To suggest that Taboo has anything to say about racial " superiority " or " inferiority " makes me believe he has not read the book. The controversy seems to be injected by others who seem intent on challenging the book for purportedly asserting that one " race " is " superior " or " inferior " than another in some way or another. In fact, Taboo goes to great length to eschew such claims--and even challenges the simplistic folkloric notions of race based on skin color. One of the fascinating sociological echoes of Taboo is that it's received the warmest reception amongst blacks (scientists and journalists) and scientists in general and the coolest reception (though still quite positive on balance, with some notable exceptions) among white social scientists. Make what you want of this- -I have my own theories. On the point of Kidd... As it happens, Kidd was one of my discussants on " Taboo " . He was interviewed for the book and read and commented on sections of the manuscript. Dr. Siff, like many others, appears to misunderstand Kidd's comments about genetic variation in Africa. Kidd makes the obvious point (which I repeat in Taboo) that Africans display more GENETIC variation than any other population. However, Dr. Siff seems to think that this means that Africans also display the most phenotypic (body characteristics) variation. That's not remotely the case. Genetic variation measures evolutionary time, not physical or physiological attributes or variety. [No, I did not. I am being misinterpreted. Mel Siff] In fact, there is less phenotypic variation in West African tribal areas than in any region in the world. The entire issue of gene variability is widely misunderstood. " In almost any single African population or tribe, there is more genetic variation than in all the rest of the world put together, " Kidd told me in an interview in 1999. " Africans have the broadest spectrum of variability, with rarer versions at either end [of the bell curve distribution]. If everyone in the world was wiped out except Africans, almost all human genetic variability would be preserved. " Many journalists and apparently Dr. Siff have taken Kidd's findings to mean that genetic variability equates with phenotypic variability. Since Africans have about 10–15 percent more genetic differences than people from anywhere else in the world, the argument goes, Africans and their Diaspora descendents should show more variability across a range of phenotypic characteristics including body type and behavior. This " fact " is often invoked to explain why athletes of African ancestry dominate elite running: it's a product of variability, not inherent population differences. This is a spurious interpretation of Kidd's data. Chimpanzees display more genetic diversity than do humans. That's because genetic variability is a marker of evolutionary time, not phenotypic variability. Each time an organism, human or otherwise, propagates, genetic " mistakes " occur as genes are mixed. The slightly increased variability in Africans reflects the accumulation of junk DNA as mutations have occurred over time. Such data " prove " little more than the fact that Africa is the likely home of modern humans– and it may not even signify that. University of Utah anthropologist and geneticist Henry Harpending and Relethford, a biological anthropologist from the State University of New York at Oneonta, have found that this genetic variation results from the fact that there were more people in Africa than everywhere else combined during most of the period of human evolution. In other words, greater African genetic variability may be the result of nothing more than fast population growth. When I asked Kidd directly whether his findings of genetic variability, which showed that blacks meant that Africans were most likely to show the most phenotypic variability in humans–the tallest and shortest, the fastest and slowest, the most intelligent and most retarded –he laughed at first. " Wouldn't that be mud in the eye for the bigots, " he said, not eager to puncture the politically correct balloon. Finally, he turned more serious. " Genes are the blueprint and the blueprint is identifiable in local populations. No matter what the environmental influences, you can1t deviate too far from it. " I asked him his thoughts on the thesis of Taboo. He said flat out that the trends we see in athletic success in many sports, sprinting in particular, reflects the differences in population genetics. Period. Dr. Siff seems to be looking for some elusive kind of " proof " , much as Creationists assail evolutionary theory. If by that, he needs to be shown a specific gene for " sprinting " that is found more in certain populations than others, he may be right--that kind of " proof " is not available. However, if he thinks that the lack of such a specific gene is meaningful, than he profoundly misunderstands how genetics works. Except for a handful of " single gene " phenotypes (such as a gene that marks for sickle cell), almost no human characteristics or behaviors are linked to single genes. Part of the confusion stems from the fact that some scientists, and certainly the general public, have embraced the popular shorthand that discrete genes have specific effects. This is sometimes expressed as there is a " gene for illness X. " Genes only specify the sequence of amino acids that are linked together in the manufacture of a molecule called a polypeptide, which must then fold up to make a protein, a process that may be different in different organisms and depends in part on the presence of yet other proteins. " [A] gene is divided up into several stretches of DNA, each of which specifies only part of the complete sequence in a polypeptide, " geneticist Lewontin has written. " Each of these partial sequences can then combine with parts specified by other genes, so that, from only a few genes, each made up of a few subsections, a very large number of combinations of different amino acid sequences could be made by mixing and matching. " Lewontin's reasonable conclusion: the mere sequencing of the human genome doesn't tell us very much about what distinguishes a human from a weed, let alone a Kenyan from a Korean. Significant between group differences have been identified in the harder-to-study regulatory genes. This tiny fraction of the human genome controls the order and make-up of proteins, and may be activated by obscure environmental triggers. For instance, the presence of an abnormal form of hemoglobin (hemoglobin S) can lead to sickle-cell anemia, which disproportionately afflicts families of African descent. But the genetic factors that actually lead to the disease operate at a much finer level. Just one change in the base pair for hemoglobin, can trigger the disease. However, the genetic factors involved are even subtler in part because of gene-gene and gene-environment interactions. For example, a separate set of genes in the genome–genes that code for fetal hemoglobin–can counteract some of the ill effects of the adult hemoglobin S genes if they continue to produce into adulthood. This range of possibilities, encoded in the genome, is found disproportionately in certain populations, but do not show up in the gross calculations of human differences that go into the misleading 99.9 percent figure. Francois and Jacques Monod, who shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1965 for their work on the regulator sequences in genes, have identified modules, each consisting of 20-30 genes, which act as an Erector Set for the mosaics that characterize each of us. Small changes in regulatory genes make large changes in organisms, perhaps by shifting entire blocks of genes on and off or by changing activation sequences. But, whether flea or fly, cocker spaniel or coyote, Brittany Spears or n , the genetic sequences are different but the basic materials are the same. Minute differences can and do have profound effects on how living beings look and behave, while huge apparent variations between species may be almost insignificant in genetic terms. We know for a FACT that there are significant patterns of differences in genetic sequences between different populations...for example, Ashkenazi Jews (I am one) are one of the most studied of populations because it was, historically, a genetically insular population and its Diaspora descendants are quite homogenous. Jews of Ashkenazi ancestry have a higher likelihood of contracting certain types of diseases, including asthma, type 2 diabetes, breast cancer, Tay Sachs, etc. Is it racist to acknowledge this? I hope not. If it is, Dr. Siff should contact Dr. Ariel Darvasi, geneticist at Hebrew University of in Jerusalem, who has set up a massive program to study this phenomenon in Israel. As it turns out, modern Ashkenazi Jews are believed to descend from about 1500 Jewish families dating back to the 14th century--hence their relative homogeneity. The same is true for many populations with West African ancestry. The West African population was very tiny as recently as 500 to 1000 years ago. Although it is genetically diverse, as a result of thousands of years of mutations, it is also genetically homogenous in terms of PATTERNS of gene sequences. Anyone, I could expand on this, but there has to be some willingness of the listener to have an open mind. Science proceeds in fits in starts. But most of all it requires a sincere commitment by those in search of the truth to posit hypotheses and be open to refinement--or even abandoning tired ideas, when the only support for them is familiarity. Again, I hope you will post this. Regards, Jon ------------------------------------ Gus Karageorgos Toronto, Canada Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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