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Summary

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1 -Main.Studies.WebHome
1 +Main Categories.Science & Research.WebHome
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1 -= Research at a Glance =
1 +{{toc/}}
2 2  
3 -== Introduction ==
4 4  
5 -Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various fields such as **social psychology, public policy, behavioral economics, and more**. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout.
4 += Research at a Glance =
6 6  
7 -=== How to Use This Repository ===
8 8  
9 -- Click on a **category** in the **Table of Contents** to browse studies related to that topic.
10 -- Click on a **study title** to expand its details, including **key findings, critique, and relevance**.
11 -- Use the **search function** (Ctrl + F or XWiki's built-in search) to quickly find specific topics or authors.
12 -- If needed, you can export this page as **PDF or print-friendly format**, and all studies will automatically expand for readability.
13 13  
8 + Welcome to the **Research at a Glance** repository. This section serves as a **centralized reference hub** for key academic studies related to various important Racial themes. Each study is categorized for easy navigation and presented in a **collapsible format** to maintain a clean layout. I wanted to make this for a couple of reasons. Number one is organization. There are a ton of useful studies out there that expose the truth, sometimes inadvertently. You'll notice that in this initial draft the summaries are often woke and reflect the bias of the AI writing them as well as the researchers politically correct conclusion in most cases. That's because I haven't gotten to going through and pointing out the reasons I put all of them in here.
14 14  
15 15  
16 -== Research Studies Repository ==
11 + There is often an underlying hypocrisy or double standard, saying the quiet part out loud, or conclusions that are so much of an antithesis to what the data shows that made me want to include it. At least, thats the idea for once its polished. I have about 150 more studies to upload, so it will be a few weeks before I get through it all. Until such time, feel free to search for them yourself and edit in what you find, or add your own studies. If you like you can do it manually, or if you'd rather go the route I did, just rename the study to its doi number and feed the study into an AI and tell them to summarize the study using the following format:
17 17  
18 18  
19 -= Study: Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding =
20 -{{expand expanded="false" title="Click here to expand details"}}
21 -**Source:** Journal of Genetic Epidemiology
22 -**Date of Publication:** 2024-01-15
23 -**Author(s):** Smith et al.
24 -**Title:** "Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding in Case-Control Association Studies"
25 -**DOI:** [https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235](https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235)
26 -**Subject Matter:** Genetics, Social Science
27 27  
28 -**Tags:** `Genetics` `Race & Ethnicity` `Biomedical Research`
15 +- Click on a **category** in the **Table of Contents** to browse studies related to that topic.
16 +- Click on a **study title** to expand its details, including **key findings, critique, and relevance**.
17 +- Use the **search function** (Ctrl + F or XWiki's built-in search) to quickly find specific topics or authors.
18 +- If needed, you can export this page as **PDF or print-friendly format**, and all studies will automatically expand for readability.
19 +- You'll also find a download link to the original full study in pdf form at the bottom of the collapsible block.
29 29  
30 -=== **Key Statistics** ===
31 31  
32 -1. **General Observations:**
33 - - A near-perfect alignment between self-identified race/ethnicity (SIRE) and genetic ancestry was observed.
34 - - Misclassification rate: **0.14%**.
35 35  
36 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
37 - - Four groups analyzed: **White, African American, East Asian, and Hispanic**.
38 - - Hispanic genetic clusters showed significant European and Native American lineage.
23 += Genetics =
39 39  
40 -=== **Findings** ===
25 +{{expandable summary="
41 41  
42 -- Self-identified race strongly aligns with genetic ancestry.
43 -- Minor discrepancies exist but do not significantly impact classification.
27 +Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History"}}
28 +**Source:** *Nature*
29 +**Date of Publication:** *2009*
30 +**Author(s):** *David Reich, Kumarasamy Thangaraj, Nick Patterson, Alkes L. Price, Lalji Singh*
31 +**Title:** *"Reconstructing Indian Population History"*
32 +**DOI:** [10.1038/nature08365](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature08365)
33 +**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Population History, South Asian Ancestry* 
44 44  
45 -=== **Relevance to Subproject** ===
46 -
47 -- Reinforces the reliability of **self-reported racial identity** in genetic research.
48 -- Highlights **policy considerations** in biomedical studies.
49 -{{/expand}}
50 -
51 -{{expand title="Study: [Study Title] (Click to Expand)" expanded="false"}}
52 -**Source:** [Journal/Institution Name]
53 -**Date of Publication:** [Publication Date]
54 -**Author(s):** [Author(s) Name(s)]
55 -**Title:** "[Study Title]"
56 -**DOI:** [DOI or Link]
57 -**Subject Matter:** [Broad Research Area, e.g., Social Psychology, Public Policy, Behavioral Economics]
58 -
59 ----
60 -
61 -## **Key Statistics**
35 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
62 62  1. **General Observations:**
63 - - [Statistical finding or observation]
64 - - [Statistical finding or observation]
37 + - Study analyzed **132 individuals from 25 diverse Indian groups**.
38 + - Identified two major ancestral populations: **Ancestral North Indians (ANI)** and **Ancestral South Indians (ASI)**.
65 65  
66 66  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
67 - - [Breakdown of findings by gender, race, or other subgroups]
41 + - ANI ancestry is closely related to **Middle Easterners, Central Asians, and Europeans**.
42 + - ASI ancestry is **genetically distinct from ANI and East Asians**.
68 68  
69 69  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
70 - - [Any additional findings or significant statistics]
45 + - ANI ancestry ranges from **39% to 71%** across Indian groups.
46 + - **Caste and linguistic differences** strongly correlate with genetic variation.
47 +{{/expandable}}
71 71  
72 ----
73 -
74 -## **Findings**
49 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
75 75  1. **Primary Observations:**
76 - - [High-level findings or trends in the study]
51 + - The genetic landscape of India has been shaped by **thousands of years of endogamy**.
52 + - Groups with **only ASI ancestry no longer exist** in mainland India.
77 77  
78 78  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
79 - - [Disparities or differences highlighted in the study]
55 + - **Higher ANI ancestry in upper-caste and Indo-European-speaking groups**.
56 + - **Andaman Islanders** are unique in having **ASI ancestry without ANI influence**.
80 80  
81 81  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
82 - - [Detailed explanation of any notable specific findings]
59 + - **Founder effects** have maintained allele frequency differences among Indian groups.
60 + - Predicts **higher incidence of recessive diseases** due to historical genetic isolation.
61 +{{/expandable}}
83 83  
84 ----
85 -
86 -## **Critique and Observations**
63 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
87 87  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
88 - - [Examples: strong methodology, large dataset, etc.]
65 + - **First large-scale genetic analysis** of Indian population history.
66 + - Introduces **new methods for ancestry estimation without direct ancestral reference groups**.
89 89  
90 90  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
91 - - [Examples: data gaps, lack of upstream analysis, etc.]
69 + - Limited **sample size relative to India's population diversity**.
70 + - Does not include **recent admixture events** post-colonial era.
92 92  
93 93  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
94 - - [Ideas for further research or addressing limitations]
73 + - Future research should **expand sampling across more Indian tribal groups**.
74 + - Use **whole-genome sequencing** for finer resolution of ancestry.
75 +{{/expandable}}
95 95  
96 ----
77 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
78 +- Provides a **genetic basis for caste and linguistic diversity** in India.
79 +- Highlights **founder effects and genetic drift** shaping South Asian populations.
80 +- Supports research on **medical genetics and disease risk prediction** in Indian populations.
81 +{{/expandable}}
97 97  
98 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
99 -- [Explanation of how this study contributes to your subproject goals.]
100 -- [Any key arguments or findings that support or challenge your views.]
83 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
84 +1. Examine **genetic markers linked to disease susceptibility** in Indian subpopulations.
85 +2. Investigate the impact of **recent migration patterns on ANI-ASI ancestry distribution**.
86 +3. Study **gene flow between Indian populations and other global groups**.
87 +{{/expandable}}
101 101  
102 ----
89 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
90 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature08365.pdf]]
91 +{{/expandable}}
92 +{{/expandable}}
103 103  
104 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
105 -1. [Research questions or areas to investigate further.]
106 -2. [Potential studies or sources to complement this analysis.]
94 +{{expandable summary="Study: The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"}}
95 +**Source:** *Nature*
96 +**Date of Publication:** *2016*
97 +**Author(s):** *David Reich, Swapan Mallick, Heng Li, Mark Lipson, and others*
98 +**Title:** *"The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"*
99 +**DOI:** [10.1038/nature18964](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature18964)
100 +**Subject Matter:** *Human Genetic Diversity, Population History, Evolutionary Genomics*
107 107  
108 ----
109 -
110 -## **Summary of Research Study**
111 -This study examines **[core research question or focus]**, providing insights into **[main subject area]**. The research utilized **[sample size and methodology]** to assess **[key variables or measured outcomes]**.
112 -
113 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study's contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
114 -
115 ----
116 -
117 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
118 -{{velocity}}
119 -#set($doi = "[Insert DOI Here]")
120 -#set($filename = "${doi}.pdf")
121 -#if($xwiki.exists("attach:$filename"))
122 -[[Download>>attach:$filename]]
123 -#else
124 -{{html}}<span style="color: red; font-weight: bold;">🚨 PDF Not Available 🚨</span>{{/html}}
125 -#end
126 -{{/velocity}}
127 -
128 -{{/expand}}
129 -
130 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
131 -
132 -
133 -
134 ----
135 -
136 -{{expand title="Study: Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018" expanded="false"}}
137 -**Source:** *JAMA Network Open*
138 -**Date of Publication:** *2020*
139 -**Author(s):** *Ueda P, Mercer CH, Ghaznavi C, Herbenick D.*
140 -**Title:** *"Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018"*
141 -**DOI:** [10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.3833](https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.3833)
142 -**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Sexual Behavior, Demography*
143 -
144 ----
145 -
146 -## **Key Statistics**
102 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
147 147  1. **General Observations:**
148 - - Study analyzed **General Social Survey (2000-2018)** data.
149 - - Found **declining trends in sexual activity** among young adults.
104 + - Analyzed **high-coverage genome sequences of 300 individuals from 142 populations**.
105 + - Included **many underrepresented and indigenous groups** from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas.
150 150  
151 151  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
152 - - Decreases in sexual activity were most prominent among **men aged 18-34**.
153 - - Factors like **marital status, employment, and psychological well-being** were associated with changes in sexual frequency.
108 + - Found **higher genetic diversity within African populations** compared to non-African groups.
109 + - Showed **Neanderthal and Denisovan ancestry in non-African populations**, particularly in Oceania.
154 154  
155 155  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
156 - - Frequency of sexual activity decreased by **8-10%** over the studied period.
157 - - Number of sexual partners remained **relatively stable** despite declining activity rates.
112 + - Identified **5.8 million base pairs absent from the human reference genome**.
113 + - Estimated that **mutations have accumulated 5% faster in non-Africans than in Africans**.
114 +{{/expandable}}
158 158  
159 ----
160 -
161 -## **Findings**
116 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
162 162  1. **Primary Observations:**
163 - - A significant decline in sexual frequency, especially among **younger men**.
164 - - Shifts in relationship dynamics and economic stressors may contribute to the trend.
118 + - **African populations harbor the greatest genetic diversity**, confirming an out-of-Africa dispersal model.
119 + - Indigenous Australians and New Guineans **share a common ancestral population with other non-Africans**.
165 165  
166 166  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
167 - - More pronounced decline among **unmarried individuals**.
168 - - No major change observed for **married adults** over time.
122 + - **Lower heterozygosity in non-Africans** due to founder effects from migration bottlenecks.
123 + - **Denisovan ancestry in South Asians is higher than previously thought**.
169 169  
170 170  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
171 - - **Mental health and employment status** were correlated with decreased activity.
172 - - Social factors such as **screen time and digital entertainment consumption** are potential contributors.
126 + - **Neanderthal ancestry is higher in East Asians than in Europeans**.
127 + - African hunter-gatherer groups show **deep population splits over 100,000 years ago**.
128 +{{/expandable}}
173 173  
174 ----
175 -
176 -## **Critique and Observations**
130 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
177 177  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
178 - - **Large sample size** from a nationally representative dataset.
179 - - **Longitudinal design** enables trend analysis over time.
132 + - **Largest global genetic dataset** outside of the 1000 Genomes Project.
133 + - High sequencing depth allows **more accurate identification of genetic variants**.
180 180  
181 181  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
182 - - Self-reported data may introduce **response bias**.
183 - - No direct causal mechanisms tested for the decline in sexual activity.
136 + - **Limited sample sizes for some populations**, restricting generalizability.
137 + - Lacks ancient DNA comparisons, making it difficult to reconstruct deep ancestry fully.
184 184  
185 185  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
186 - - Further studies should incorporate **qualitative data** on behavioral shifts.
187 - - Additional factors such as **economic shifts and social media usage** need exploration.
140 + - Future studies should include **ancient genomes** to improve demographic modeling.
141 + - Expand research into **how genetic variation affects health outcomes** across populations.
142 +{{/expandable}}
188 188  
189 ----
144 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
145 +- Provides **comprehensive data on human genetic diversity**, useful for **evolutionary studies**.
146 +- Supports research on **Neanderthal and Denisovan introgression** in modern human populations.
147 +- Enhances understanding of **genetic adaptation and disease susceptibility across groups**.
148 +{{/expandable}}
190 190  
191 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
192 -- Provides evidence on **changing demographic behaviors** in relation to relationships and social interactions.
193 -- Highlights the role of **mental health, employment, and societal changes** in personal behaviors.
150 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
151 +1. Investigate **functional consequences of genetic variation in underrepresented populations**.
152 +2. Study **how selection pressures shaped genetic diversity across different environments**.
153 +3. Explore **medical applications of population-specific genetic markers**.
154 +{{/expandable}}
194 194  
195 ----
156 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
157 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature18964.pdf]]
158 +{{/expandable}}
159 +{{/expandable}}
196 196  
197 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
198 -1. Investigate the **impact of digital media consumption** on relationship dynamics.
199 -2. Examine **regional and cultural differences** in sexual activity trends.
161 +{{expandable summary="
200 200  
201 ----
163 +Study: Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"}}
164 +**Source:** *Nature Genetics*
165 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
166 +**Author(s):** *Tinca J. C. Polderman, Beben Benyamin, Christiaan A. de Leeuw, Patrick F. Sullivan, Arjen van Bochoven, Peter M. Visscher, Danielle Posthuma*
167 +**Title:** *"Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"*
168 +**DOI:** [10.1038/ng.328](https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.328)
169 +**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Heritability, Twin Studies, Behavioral Science*
202 202  
203 -## **Summary of Research Study**
204 -This study examines **trends in sexual frequency and number of partners among U.S. adults (2000-2018)**, highlighting significant **declines in sexual activity, particularly among young men**. The research utilized **General Social Survey data** to analyze the impact of **sociodemographic factors, employment status, and mental well-being** on sexual behavior.
205 -
206 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study's contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
207 -
208 ----
209 -
210 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
211 -{{velocity}}
212 -#set($doi = "10.1001_jamanetworkopen.2020.3833")
213 -#set($filename = "${doi}.pdf")
214 -#if($xwiki.exists("attach:$filename"))
215 -[[Download>>attach:$filename]]
216 -#else
217 -{{html}}<span style="color: red; font-weight: bold;">🚨 PDF Not Available 🚨</span>{{/html}}
218 -#end
219 -{{/velocity}}
220 -
221 -{{/expand}}
222 -
223 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
224 -
225 -
226 -{{expand title="Study: One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness" expanded="false"}}
227 -**Source:** *Current Psychology*
228 -**Date of Publication:** *2024*
229 -**Author(s):** *Brandon Sparks, Alexandra M. Zidenberg, Mark E. Olver*
230 -**Title:** *"One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"*
231 -**DOI:** [10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z](https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z)
232 -**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Mental Health, Social Isolation*
233 -
234 ----
235 -
236 -## **Key Statistics**
171 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
237 237  1. **General Observations:**
238 - - Study analyzed **67 self-identified incels** and **103 non-incel men**.
239 - - Incels reported **higher loneliness and lower social support** compared to non-incels.
173 + - Analyzed **17,804 traits from 2,748 twin studies** published between **1958 and 2012**.
174 + - Included data from **14,558,903 twin pairs**, making it the largest meta-analysis on human heritability.
240 240  
241 241  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
242 - - Incels exhibited **higher levels of depression, anxiety, and self-critical rumination**.
243 - - **Social isolation was a key factor** differentiating incels from non-incels.
177 + - Found **49% average heritability** across all traits.
178 + - **69% of traits follow a simple additive genetic model**, meaning most variance is due to genes, not environment.
244 244  
245 245  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
246 - - 95% of incels in the study reported **having depression**, with 38% receiving a formal diagnosis.
247 - - **Higher externalization of blame** was linked to stronger incel identification.
181 + - **Neurological, metabolic, and psychiatric traits** showed the highest heritability estimates.
182 + - Traits related to **social values and environmental interactions** had lower heritability estimates.
183 +{{/expandable}}
248 248  
249 ----
250 -
251 -## **Findings**
185 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
252 252  1. **Primary Observations:**
253 - - Incels experience **heightened rejection sensitivity and loneliness**.
254 - - Lack of social support correlates with **worse mental health outcomes**.
187 + - Across all traits, genetic factors play a significant role in individual differences.
188 + - The study contradicts models that **overestimate environmental effects in behavioral and cognitive traits**.
255 255  
256 256  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
257 - - **Avoidant attachment styles** were a strong predictor of incel identity.
258 - - **Mate value perceptions** significantly differed between incels and non-incels.
191 + - **Eye and brain-related traits showed the highest heritability (70-80%)**.
192 + - **Shared environmental effects were negligible (<10%) for most traits**.
259 259  
260 260  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
261 - - Incels **engaged in fewer positive coping mechanisms** such as emotional support or positive reframing.
262 - - Instead, they relied on **solitary coping strategies**, worsening their isolation.
195 + - Twin correlations suggest **limited evidence for strong non-additive genetic influences**.
196 + - The study highlights **missing heritability in complex traits**, which genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have yet to fully explain.
197 +{{/expandable}}
263 263  
264 ----
265 -
266 -## **Critique and Observations**
199 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
267 267  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
268 - - **First quantitative study** on incels’ social isolation and mental health.
269 - - **Robust sample size** and validated psychological measures.
201 + - **Largest-ever heritability meta-analysis**, covering nearly all published twin studies.
202 + - Provides a **comprehensive framework for understanding gene-environment contributions**.
270 270  
271 271  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
272 - - Sample drawn from **Reddit communities**, which may not represent all incels.
273 - - **No causal conclusions**—correlations between isolation and inceldom need further research.
205 + - **Underrepresentation of African, South American, and Asian twin cohorts**, limiting global generalizability.
206 + - Cannot **fully separate genetic influences from potential cultural/environmental confounders**.
274 274  
275 275  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
276 - - Future studies should **compare incel forum users vs. non-users**.
277 - - Investigate **potential intervention strategies** for social integration.
209 + - Future research should use **whole-genome sequencing** for finer-grained heritability estimates.
210 + - **Incorporate non-Western populations** to assess global heritability trends.
211 +{{/expandable}}
278 278  
279 ----
213 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
214 +- Establishes a **quantitative benchmark for heritability across human traits**.
215 +- Reinforces **genetic influence on cognitive, behavioral, and physical traits**.
216 +- Highlights the need for **genome-wide studies to identify missing heritability**.
217 +{{/expandable}}
280 280  
281 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
282 -- Highlights **mental health vulnerabilities** within the incel community.
283 -- Supports research on **loneliness, attachment styles, and social dominance orientation**.
284 -- Examines how **peer rejection influences self-perceived mate value**.
219 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
220 +1. Investigate how **heritability estimates compare across different socioeconomic backgrounds**.
221 +2. Examine **gene-environment interactions in cognitive and psychiatric traits**.
222 +3. Explore **non-additive genetic effects on human traits using newer statistical models**.
223 +{{/expandable}}
285 285  
286 ----
225 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
226 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_ng.328.pdf]]
227 +{{/expandable}}
228 +{{/expandable}}
287 287  
288 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
289 -1. Explore how **online community participation** affects incel mental health.
290 -2. Investigate **cognitive biases** influencing self-perceived rejection among incels.
291 -3. Assess **therapeutic interventions** to address incel social isolation.
230 +{{expandable summary="
292 292  
293 ----
232 +Study: Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease"}}
233 +**Source:** *Nature Reviews Genetics*
234 +**Date of Publication:** *2002*
235 +**Author(s):** *Sarah A. Tishkoff, Scott M. Williams*
236 +**Title:** *"Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease"*
237 +**DOI:** [10.1038/nrg865](https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg865)
238 +**Subject Matter:** *Population Genetics, Human Evolution, Complex Diseases* 
294 294  
295 -## **Summary of Research Study**
296 -This study examines the **psychological characteristics of self-identified incels**, comparing them with non-incel men in terms of **mental health, loneliness, and coping strategies**. The research found **higher depression, anxiety, and avoidant attachment styles among incels**, as well as **greater reliance on solitary coping mechanisms**. It suggests that **lack of social support plays a critical role in exacerbating incel identity and related mental health concerns**.
297 -
298 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
299 -
300 ----
301 -
302 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
303 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1007_s12144-023-04275-z.pdf]]
304 -
305 -{{/expand}}
306 -
307 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
308 -
309 -{{expand title="Study: Associations Between Cannabis Use and Mental Health Symptoms in Young Adults" expanded="false"}} Source: Addictive Behaviors
310 -Date of Publication: 2016
311 -Author(s): Andrea Hussong, Christy Capron, Gregory T. Smith, Jennifer L. Maggs
312 -Title: "Associations Between Cannabis Use and Mental Health Symptoms in Young Adults"
313 -DOI: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2016.02.030
314 -Subject Matter: Substance Use, Mental Health, Adolescent Development
315 -
316 -Key Statistics
317 -General Observations:
318 -
319 -Study examined cannabis use trends in young adults over time.
320 -Found significant correlations between cannabis use and increased depressive symptoms.
321 -Subgroup Analysis:
322 -
323 -Males exhibited higher rates of cannabis use, but females reported stronger mental health impacts.
324 -Individuals with pre-existing anxiety disorders were more likely to report problematic cannabis use.
325 -Other Significant Data Points:
326 -
327 -Frequent cannabis users showed a 23% higher likelihood of developing anxiety symptoms.
328 -Co-occurring substance use (e.g., alcohol) exacerbated negative psychological effects.
329 -Findings
330 -Primary Observations:
331 -
332 -Cannabis use was linked to higher depressive and anxiety symptoms, particularly in frequent users.
333 -Self-medication patterns emerged among those with pre-existing mental health conditions.
334 -Subgroup Trends:
335 -
336 -Early cannabis initiation (before age 16) was associated with greater mental health risks.
337 -College-aged users reported more impairments in daily functioning due to cannabis use.
338 -Specific Case Analysis:
339 -
340 -Participants with a history of childhood trauma were twice as likely to develop problematic cannabis use.
341 -Co-use of cannabis and alcohol significantly increased impulsivity scores in the study sample.
342 -Critique and Observations
343 -Strengths of the Study:
344 -
345 -Large, longitudinal dataset with a diverse sample of young adults.
346 -Controlled for confounding variables like socioeconomic status and prior substance use.
347 -Limitations of the Study:
348 -
349 -Self-reported cannabis use may introduce bias in reported frequency and effects.
350 -Did not assess specific THC potency levels, which could influence mental health outcomes.
351 -Suggestions for Improvement:
352 -
353 -Future research should investigate dose-dependent effects of cannabis on mental health.
354 -Assess long-term psychological outcomes of early cannabis exposure.
355 -Relevance to Subproject
356 -Supports mental health risk assessment models related to substance use.
357 -Highlights gender differences in substance-related psychological impacts.
358 -Provides insight into self-medication behaviors among young adults.
359 -Suggestions for Further Exploration
360 -Investigate the long-term impact of cannabis use on neurodevelopment.
361 -Examine the role of genetic predisposition in cannabis-related mental health risks.
362 -Assess regional differences in cannabis use trends post-legalization.
363 -Summary of Research Study
364 -This study examines the relationship between cannabis use and mental health symptoms in young adults, focusing on depressive and anxiety-related outcomes. Using a longitudinal dataset, the researchers found higher risks of anxiety and depression in frequent cannabis users, particularly among those with pre-existing mental health conditions or early cannabis initiation.
365 -
366 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
367 -
368 -📄 Download Full Study
369 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.addbeh.2016.02.030.pdf]]
370 -
371 -{{/expand}}
372 -
373 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
374 -
375 -{{expand title="Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?" expanded="false"}}
376 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
377 -**Date of Publication:** *2014*
378 -**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley, Jan te Nijenhuis, Raegan Murphy*
379 -**Title:** *"Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"*
380 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012)
381 -**Subject Matter:** *Cognitive Decline, Intelligence, Dysgenics*
382 -
383 ----
384 -
385 -## **Key Statistics**
240 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
386 386  1. **General Observations:**
387 - - The study examines reaction time data from **13 age-matched studies** spanning **1884–2004**.
388 - - Results suggest an estimated **decline of 13.35 IQ points** over this period.
242 + - Africa harbors **the highest genetic diversity** of any region, making it key to understanding human evolution.
243 + - The study analyzes **genetic variation and linkage disequilibrium (LD) in African populations**.
389 389  
390 390  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
391 - - The study found **slower reaction times in modern populations** compared to Victorian-era individuals.
392 - - Data from **Western countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Finland)** were analyzed.
246 + - African populations exhibit **greater genetic differentiation compared to non-Africans**.
247 + - **Migration and admixture** have shaped modern African genomes over the past **100,000 years**.
393 393  
394 394  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
395 - - The estimated **dysgenic rate is 1.21 IQ points lost per decade**.
396 - - Meta-regression analysis confirmed a **steady secular trend in slowing reaction time**.
250 + - The **effective population size (Ne) of Africans** is higher than that of non-African populations.
251 + - LD blocks are **shorter in African genomes**, suggesting more historical recombination events.
252 +{{/expandable}}
397 397  
398 ----
399 -
400 -## **Findings**
254 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
401 401  1. **Primary Observations:**
402 - - Supports the hypothesis of **intelligence decline due to genetic and environmental factors**.
403 - - Reaction time, a **biomarker for cognitive ability**, has slowed significantly over time.
256 + - African populations are the **most genetically diverse**, supporting the *Recent African Origin* hypothesis.
257 + - Genetic variation in African populations can **help fine-map complex disease genes**.
404 404  
405 405  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
406 - - A stronger **correlation between slower reaction time and lower general intelligence (g)**.
407 - - Flynn effect (IQ gains) does not contradict this finding, as reaction time is a **biological, not environmental, measure**.
260 + - **West Africans exhibit higher genetic diversity** than East Africans due to differing migration patterns.
261 + - Populations such as **San hunter-gatherers show deep genetic divergence**.
408 408  
409 409  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
410 - - Cross-national comparisons indicate a **global trend in slower reaction times**.
411 - - Factors like **modern neurotoxin exposure** and **reduced selective pressure for intelligence** may contribute.
264 + - Admixture in African Americans includes **West African and European genetic contributions**.
265 + - SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) diversity in African genomes **exceeds that of non-African groups**.
266 +{{/expandable}}
412 412  
413 ----
414 -
415 -## **Critique and Observations**
268 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
416 416  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
417 - - **Comprehensive meta-analysis** covering over a century of reaction time data.
418 - - **Robust statistical corrections** for measurement variance between historical and modern studies.
270 + - Provides **comprehensive genetic analysis** of diverse African populations.
271 + - Highlights **how genetic diversity impacts health disparities and disease risks**.
419 419  
420 420  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
421 - - Some historical data sources **lack methodological consistency**.
422 - - **Reaction time measurements vary by study**, requiring adjustments for equipment differences.
274 + - Many **African populations remain understudied**, limiting full understanding of diversity.
275 + - Focuses more on genetic variation than on **specific disease mechanisms**.
423 423  
424 424  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
425 - - Future studies should **replicate results with more modern datasets**.
426 - - Investigate **alternative cognitive biomarkers** for intelligence over time.
278 + - Expand research into **underrepresented African populations**.
279 + - Integrate **whole-genome sequencing for a more detailed evolutionary timeline**.
280 +{{/expandable}}
427 427  
428 ----
282 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
283 +- Supports **genetic models of human evolution** and the **out-of-Africa hypothesis**.
284 +- Reinforces **Africa’s key role in disease gene mapping and precision medicine**.
285 +- Provides insight into **historical migration patterns and their genetic impact**.
286 +{{/expandable}}
429 429  
430 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
431 -- Provides evidence for **long-term intelligence trends**, contributing to research on **cognitive evolution**.
432 -- Aligns with broader discussions on **dysgenics, neurophysiology, and cognitive load**.
433 -- Supports the argument that **modern societies may be experiencing intelligence decline**.
288 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
289 +1. Investigate **genetic adaptations to local environments within Africa**.
290 +2. Study **the role of African genetic diversity in disease resistance**.
291 +3. Expand research on **how ancient migration patterns shaped modern genetic structure**.
292 +{{/expandable}}
434 434  
435 ----
294 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
295 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nrg865MODERN.pdf]]
296 +{{/expandable}}
297 +{{/expandable}}
436 436  
437 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
438 -1. Investigate **genetic markers associated with reaction time** and intelligence decline.
439 -2. Examine **regional variations in reaction time trends**.
440 -3. Explore **cognitive resilience factors that counteract the decline**.
299 +{{expandable summary="
441 441  
442 ----
301 +Study: Pervasive Findings of Directional Selection in Ancient DNA"}}
302 +**Source:** *bioRxiv Preprint*
303 +**Date of Publication:** *September 15, 2024*
304 +**Author(s):** *Ali Akbari, Alison R. Barton, Steven Gazal, Zheng Li, Mohammadreza Kariminejad, et al.*
305 +**Title:** *"Pervasive findings of directional selection realize the promise of ancient DNA to elucidate human adaptation"*
306 +**DOI:** [10.1101/2024.09.14.613021](https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.14.613021)
307 +**Subject Matter:** *Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Natural Selection*
443 443  
444 -## **Summary of Research Study**
445 -This study examines **historical reaction time data** as a measure of **cognitive ability and intelligence decline**, analyzing data from **Western populations between 1884 and 2004**. The results suggest a **measurable decline in intelligence, estimated at 13.35 IQ points**, likely due to **dysgenic fertility, neurophysiological factors, and reduced selection pressures**.
446 -
447 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
448 -
449 ----
450 -
451 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
452 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2014.05.012.pdf]]
453 -
454 -{{/expand}}
455 -
456 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
457 -
458 -{{expand title="Study: A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation" expanded="false"}}
459 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
460 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
461 -**Author(s):** *Davide Piffer*
462 -**Title:** *"A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"*
463 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008)
464 -**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Intelligence, GWAS, Population Differences*
465 -
466 ----
467 -
468 -## **Key Statistics**
309 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
469 469  1. **General Observations:**
470 - - Study analyzed **genome-wide association studies (GWAS) hits** linked to intelligence.
471 - - Found a **strong correlation (r = .91) between polygenic intelligence scores and national IQ levels**.
311 + - Study analyzes **8,433 ancient individuals** from the past **14,000 years**.
312 + - Identifies **347 genome-wide significant loci** showing strong selection.
472 472  
473 473  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
474 - - Factor analysis of **9 intelligence-associated alleles** revealed a metagene correlated with **country IQ (r = .86)**.
475 - - **Allele frequencies varied significantly by continent**, aligning with observed population differences in cognitive ability.
315 + - Examines **West Eurasian populations** and their genetic evolution.
316 + - Tracks **changes in allele frequencies over millennia**.
476 476  
477 477  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
478 - - GWAS intelligence SNPs predicted **IQ levels more strongly than random genetic markers**.
479 - - Genetic differentiation (Fst values) showed that **selection pressure, rather than drift, influenced intelligence-related allele distributions**.
319 + - **10,000 years of directional selection** affected metabolic, immune, and cognitive traits.
320 + - **Strong selection signals** found for traits like **skin pigmentation, cognitive function, and immunity**.
321 +{{/expandable}}
480 480  
481 ----
482 -
483 -## **Findings**
323 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
484 484  1. **Primary Observations:**
485 - - Intelligence-associated SNP frequencies correlate **highly with national IQ levels**.
486 - - Genetic selection for intelligence appears **stronger than selection for height-related genes**.
325 + - **Hundreds of alleles have been subject to directional selection** over recent millennia.
326 + - Traits like **immune function, metabolism, and cognitive performance** show strong selection.
487 487  
488 488  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
489 - - **East Asian populations** exhibited the **highest frequencies of intelligence-associated alleles**.
490 - - **African populations** showed lower frequencies compared to European and East Asian populations.
329 + - Selection pressure on **energy storage genes** supports the **Thrifty Gene Hypothesis**.
330 + - **Cognitive performance-related alleles** have undergone selection, but their historical advantages remain unclear.
491 491  
492 492  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
493 - - Polygenic scores using **intelligence-related alleles significantly outperformed random SNPs** in predicting IQ.
494 - - Selection pressures **may explain differences in global intelligence distribution** beyond genetic drift effects.
333 + - **Celiac disease risk allele** increased from **0% to 20%** in 4,000 years.
334 + - **Blood type B frequency rose from 0% to 8% in 6,000 years**.
335 + - **Tuberculosis risk allele** fluctuated from **2% to 9% over 3,000 years before declining**.
336 +{{/expandable}}
495 495  
496 ----
497 -
498 -## **Critique and Observations**
338 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
499 499  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
500 - - **Comprehensive genetic analysis** of intelligence-linked SNPs.
501 - - Uses **multiple statistical methods (factor analysis, Fst analysis) to confirm results**.
340 + - **Largest dataset to date** on natural selection in human ancient DNA.
341 + - Uses **direct allele frequency tracking instead of indirect measures**.
502 502  
503 503  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
504 - - **Correlation does not imply causation**; factors beyond genetics influence intelligence.
505 - - **Limited number of GWAS-identified intelligence alleles**—future studies may identify more.
344 + - Findings **may not translate directly** to modern populations.
345 + - **Unclear whether observed selection pressures persist today**.
506 506  
507 507  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
508 - - Larger **cross-population GWAS studies** needed to validate findings.
509 - - Investigate **non-genetic contributors to IQ variance** in addition to genetic factors.
348 + - Expanding research to **other global populations** to assess universal trends.
349 + - Investigating **long-term evolutionary trade-offs of selected alleles**.
350 +{{/expandable}}
510 510  
511 ----
352 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
353 +- Provides **direct evidence of long-term genetic adaptation** in human populations.
354 +- Supports theories on **polygenic selection shaping human cognition, metabolism, and immunity**.
355 +- Highlights **how past selection pressures may still influence modern health and disease prevalence**.
356 +{{/expandable}}
512 512  
513 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
514 -- Supports research on **genetic influences on intelligence at a population level**.
515 -- Aligns with broader discussions on **cognitive genetics and natural selection effects**.
516 -- Provides a **quantitative framework for analyzing polygenic selection in intelligence studies**.
358 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
359 +1. Examine **selection patterns in non-European populations** for comparison.
360 +2. Investigate **how environmental and cultural shifts influenced genetic selection**.
361 +3. Explore **the genetic basis of traits linked to past and present-day human survival**.
362 +{{/expandable}}
517 517  
518 ----
364 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
365 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1101_2024.09.14.613021doi_.pdf]]
366 +{{/expandable}}
367 +{{/expandable}}
519 519  
520 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
521 -1. Conduct **expanded GWAS studies** including diverse populations.
522 -2. Investigate **gene-environment interactions influencing intelligence**.
523 -3. Explore **historical selection pressures shaping intelligence-related alleles**.
369 +{{expandable summary="Study: The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"}}
370 +**Source:** *Twin Research and Human Genetics (Cambridge University Press)*
371 +**Date of Publication:** *2013*
372 +**Author(s):** *Thomas J. Bouchard Jr.*
373 +**Title:** *"The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"*
374 +**DOI:** [10.1017/thg.2013.54](https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2013.54)
375 +**Subject Matter:** *Intelligence, Heritability, Developmental Psychology*
524 524  
525 ----
526 -
527 -## **Summary of Research Study**
528 -This study reviews **genome-wide association study (GWAS) findings on intelligence**, demonstrating a **strong correlation between polygenic intelligence scores and national IQ levels**. The research highlights how **genetic selection may explain population-level cognitive differences beyond genetic drift effects**. Intelligence-linked alleles showed **higher variability across populations than height-related alleles**, suggesting stronger selection pressures.
529 -
530 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
531 -
532 ----
533 -
534 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
535 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2015.08.008.pdf]]
536 -
537 -{{/expand}}
538 -
539 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
540 -
541 -{{expand title="Study: Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media" expanded="false"}}
542 -**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
543 -**Date of Publication:** *2019*
544 -**Author(s):** *Heiner Rindermann, David Becker, Thomas R. Coyle*
545 -**Title:** *"Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"*
546 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406)
547 -**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Intelligence Research, Expert Analysis*
548 -
549 ----
550 -
551 -## **Key Statistics**
377 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
552 552  1. **General Observations:**
553 - - Survey of **102 experts** on intelligence research and public discourse.
554 - - Evaluated experts' backgrounds, political affiliations, and views on controversial topics in intelligence research.
379 + - The study documents how the **heritability of IQ increases with age**, reaching an asymptote at **0.80 by adulthood**.
380 + - Analysis is based on **longitudinal twin and adoption studies**.
555 555  
556 556  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
557 - - **90% of experts were from Western countries**, and **83% were male**.
558 - - Political spectrum ranged from **54% left-liberal, 24% conservative**, with significant ideological influences on views.
383 + - Shared environmental influence on IQ **declines with age**, reaching **0.10 in adulthood**.
384 + - Monozygotic twins show **increasing genetic similarity in IQ over time**, while dizygotic twins become **less concordant**.
559 559  
560 560  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
561 - - Experts rated media coverage of intelligence research as **poor (avg. 3.1 on a 9-point scale)**.
562 - - **50% of experts attributed US Black-White IQ differences to genetic factors, 50% to environmental factors**.
387 + - Data from the **Louisville Longitudinal Twin Study and cross-national twin samples** support findings.
388 + - IQ stability over time is **influenced more by genetics than by shared environmental factors**.
389 +{{/expandable}}
563 563  
564 ----
565 -
566 -## **Findings**
391 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
567 567  1. **Primary Observations:**
568 - - Experts overwhelmingly support **the g-factor theory of intelligence**.
569 - - **Heritability of intelligence** was widely accepted, though views differed on race and group differences.
393 + - Intelligence heritability **strengthens throughout development**, contrary to early environmental models.
394 + - Shared environmental effects **decrease by late adolescence**, emphasizing **genetic influence in adulthood**.
570 570  
571 571  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
572 - - **Left-leaning experts were more likely to reject genetic explanations for group IQ differences**.
573 - - **Right-leaning experts tended to favor a stronger role for genetic factors** in intelligence disparities.
397 + - Studies from **Scotland, Netherlands, and the US** show **consistent patterns of increasing heritability with age**.
398 + - Findings hold across **varied socio-economic and educational backgrounds**.
574 574  
575 575  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
576 - - The study compared **media coverage of intelligence research** with expert opinions.
577 - - Found a **disconnect between journalists and intelligence researchers**, especially regarding politically sensitive issues.
401 + - Longitudinal adoption studies show **declining impact of adoptive parental influence on IQ** as children age.
402 + - Cross-sectional twin data confirm **higher IQ correlations for monozygotic twins in adulthood**.
403 +{{/expandable}}
578 578  
579 ----
580 -
581 -## **Critique and Observations**
405 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
582 582  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
583 - - **Largest expert survey on intelligence research** to date.
584 - - Provides insight into **how political orientation influences scientific perspectives**.
407 + - **Robust dataset covering multiple twin and adoption studies over decades**.
408 + - **Clear, replicable trend** demonstrating the increasing role of genetics in intelligence.
585 585  
586 586  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
587 - - **Sample primarily from Western countries**, limiting global perspectives.
588 - - Self-selection bias may skew responses toward **those more willing to engage with controversial topics**.
411 + - Findings apply primarily to **Western industrialized nations**, limiting generalizability.
412 + - **Lack of neurobiological mechanisms** explaining how genes express their influence over time.
589 589  
590 590  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
591 - - Future studies should include **a broader range of global experts**.
592 - - Additional research needed on **media biases and misrepresentation of intelligence research**.
415 + - Future research should investigate **gene-environment interactions in cognitive aging**.
416 + - Examine **heritability trends in non-Western populations** to determine cross-cultural consistency.
417 +{{/expandable}}
593 593  
594 ----
419 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
420 +- Provides **strong evidence for the genetic basis of intelligence**.
421 +- Highlights the **diminishing role of shared environment in cognitive development**.
422 +- Supports research on **cognitive aging and heritability across the lifespan**.
423 +{{/expandable}}
595 595  
596 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
597 -- Provides insight into **expert consensus and division on intelligence research**.
598 -- Highlights the **role of media bias** in shaping public perception of intelligence science.
599 -- Useful for understanding **the intersection of science, politics, and public discourse** on intelligence research.
425 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
426 +1. Investigate **neurogenetic pathways underlying IQ development**.
427 +2. Examine **how education and socioeconomic factors interact with genetic IQ influences**.
428 +3. Study **heritability trends in aging populations and cognitive decline**.
429 +{{/expandable}}
600 600  
601 ----
431 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
432 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1017_thg.2013.54.pdf]]
433 +{{/expandable}}
434 +{{/expandable}}
602 602  
603 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
604 -1. Examine **cross-national differences** in expert opinions on intelligence.
605 -2. Investigate how **media bias impacts public understanding of intelligence research**.
606 -3. Conduct follow-up studies with **a more diverse expert pool** to test findings.
436 +{{expandable summary="Study: Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"}}
437 +**Source:** *Medical Hypotheses (Elsevier)*
438 +**Date of Publication:** *2010*
439 +**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley*
440 +**Title:** *"Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"*
441 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046)
442 +**Subject Matter:** *Human Taxonomy, Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology*
607 607  
608 ----
609 -
610 -## **Summary of Research Study**
611 -This study surveys **expert opinions on intelligence research**, analyzing **how backgrounds, political ideologies, and media representation influence perspectives on intelligence**. The findings highlight **divisions in scientific consensus**, particularly on **genetic vs. environmental causes of IQ disparities**. Additionally, the research uncovers **widespread dissatisfaction with media portrayals of intelligence research**, pointing to **the impact of ideological biases on public discourse**.
612 -
613 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
614 -
615 ----
616 -
617 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
618 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2019.101406.pdf]]
619 -
620 -{{/expand}}
621 -
622 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
623 -
624 -{{expand title="Study: Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications" expanded="false"}}
625 -**Source:** *Medical Hypotheses (Elsevier)*
626 -**Date of Publication:** *2010*
627 -**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley*
628 -**Title:** *"Is Homo sapiens polytypic? Human taxonomic diversity and its implications"*
629 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2009.07.046)
630 -**Subject Matter:** *Human Taxonomy, Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology*
631 -
632 ----
633 -
634 -## **Key Statistics**
444 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
635 635  1. **General Observations:**
636 636   - The study argues that **Homo sapiens is polytypic**, meaning it consists of multiple subspecies rather than a single monotypic species.
637 637   - Examines **genetic diversity, morphological variation, and evolutionary lineage** in humans.
... ... @@ -643,10 +643,9 @@
643 643  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
644 644   - The study evaluates **FST values (genetic differentiation measure)** and argues that human genetic differentiation is comparable to that of recognized subspecies in other species.
645 645   - Considers **phylogenetic species concepts** in defining human variation.
456 +{{/expandable}}
646 646  
647 ----
648 -
649 -## **Findings**
458 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
650 650  1. **Primary Observations:**
651 651   - Proposes that **modern human populations meet biological criteria for subspecies classification**.
652 652   - Highlights **medical and evolutionary implications** of human taxonomic diversity.
... ... @@ -658,10 +658,9 @@
658 658  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
659 659   - Evaluates how **genetic markers correlate with population structure**.
660 660   - Addresses the **controversy over race classification in modern anthropology**.
470 +{{/expandable}}
661 661  
662 ----
663 -
664 -## **Critique and Observations**
472 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
665 665  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
666 666   - Uses **comparative species analysis** to assess human classification.
667 667   - Provides a **biological perspective** on the race concept, moving beyond social constructivism arguments.
... ... @@ -673,1132 +673,1006 @@
673 673  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
674 674   - Further research should **incorporate whole-genome studies** to refine subspecies classifications.
675 675   - Investigate **how admixture affects taxonomic classification over time**.
484 +{{/expandable}}
676 676  
677 ----
678 -
679 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
486 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
680 680  - Contributes to discussions on **evolutionary taxonomy and species classification**.
681 681  - Provides evidence on **genetic differentiation among human populations**.
682 682  - Highlights **historical and contemporary scientific debates on race and human variation**.
490 +{{/expandable}}
683 683  
684 ----
685 -
686 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
492 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
687 687  1. Examine **FST values in modern and ancient human populations**.
688 688  2. Investigate how **adaptive evolution influences population differentiation**.
689 689  3. Explore **the impact of genetic diversity on medical treatments and disease susceptibility**.
496 +{{/expandable}}
690 690  
691 ----
692 -
693 -## **Summary of Research Study**
694 -This study evaluates **whether Homo sapiens should be classified as a polytypic species**, analyzing **genetic diversity, evolutionary lineage, and morphological variation**. Using comparative analysis with other primates and mammals, the research suggests that **human populations meet biological criteria for subspecies classification**, with implications for **evolutionary biology, anthropology, and medicine**.
695 -
696 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
697 -
698 ----
699 -
700 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
498 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
701 701  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.mehy.2009.07.046.pdf]]
500 +{{/expandable}}
501 +{{/expandable}}
702 702  
703 -{{/expand}}
503 += IQ =
704 704  
705 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
505 +{{expandable summary="Study: Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"}}
506 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
507 +**Date of Publication:** *2019*
508 +**Author(s):** *Heiner Rindermann, David Becker, Thomas R. Coyle*
509 +**Title:** *"Survey of Expert Opinion on Intelligence: Intelligence Research, Experts' Background, Controversial Issues, and the Media"*
510 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2019.101406)
511 +**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Intelligence Research, Expert Analysis*
706 706  
707 -{{expand title="Study: The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age" expanded="false"}}
708 -**Source:** *Twin Research and Human Genetics (Cambridge University Press)*
709 -**Date of Publication:** *2013*
710 -**Author(s):** *Thomas J. Bouchard Jr.*
711 -**Title:** *"The Wilson Effect: The Increase in Heritability of IQ With Age"*
712 -**DOI:** [10.1017/thg.2013.54](https://doi.org/10.1017/thg.2013.54)
713 -**Subject Matter:** *Intelligence, Heritability, Developmental Psychology*
714 -
715 ----
716 -
717 -## **Key Statistics**
513 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
718 718  1. **General Observations:**
719 - - The study documents how the **heritability of IQ increases with age**, reaching an asymptote at **0.80 by adulthood**.
720 - - Analysis is based on **longitudinal twin and adoption studies**.
515 + - Survey of **102 experts** on intelligence research and public discourse.
516 + - Evaluated experts' backgrounds, political affiliations, and views on controversial topics in intelligence research.
721 721  
722 722  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
723 - - Shared environmental influence on IQ **declines with age**, reaching **0.10 in adulthood**.
724 - - Monozygotic twins show **increasing genetic similarity in IQ over time**, while dizygotic twins become **less concordant**.
519 + - **90% of experts were from Western countries**, and **83% were male**.
520 + - Political spectrum ranged from **54% left-liberal, 24% conservative**, with significant ideological influences on views.
725 725  
726 726  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
727 - - Data from the **Louisville Longitudinal Twin Study and cross-national twin samples** support findings.
728 - - IQ stability over time is **influenced more by genetics than by shared environmental factors**.
523 + - Experts rated media coverage of intelligence research as **poor (avg. 3.1 on a 9-point scale)**.
524 + - **50% of experts attributed US Black-White IQ differences to genetic factors, 50% to environmental factors**.
525 +{{/expandable}}
729 729  
730 ----
731 -
732 -## **Findings**
527 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
733 733  1. **Primary Observations:**
734 - - Intelligence heritability **strengthens throughout development**, contrary to early environmental models.
735 - - Shared environmental effects **decrease by late adolescence**, emphasizing **genetic influence in adulthood**.
529 + - Experts overwhelmingly support **the g-factor theory of intelligence**.
530 + - **Heritability of intelligence** was widely accepted, though views differed on race and group differences.
736 736  
737 737  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
738 - - Studies from **Scotland, Netherlands, and the US** show **consistent patterns of increasing heritability with age**.
739 - - Findings hold across **varied socio-economic and educational backgrounds**.
533 + - **Left-leaning experts were more likely to reject genetic explanations for group IQ differences**.
534 + - **Right-leaning experts tended to favor a stronger role for genetic factors** in intelligence disparities.
740 740  
741 741  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
742 - - Longitudinal adoption studies show **declining impact of adoptive parental influence on IQ** as children age.
743 - - Cross-sectional twin data confirm **higher IQ correlations for monozygotic twins in adulthood**.
537 + - The study compared **media coverage of intelligence research** with expert opinions.
538 + - Found a **disconnect between journalists and intelligence researchers**, especially regarding politically sensitive issues.
539 +{{/expandable}}
744 744  
745 ----
746 -
747 -## **Critique and Observations**
541 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
748 748  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
749 - - **Robust dataset covering multiple twin and adoption studies over decades**.
750 - - **Clear, replicable trend** demonstrating the increasing role of genetics in intelligence.
543 + - **Largest expert survey on intelligence research** to date.
544 + - Provides insight into **how political orientation influences scientific perspectives**.
751 751  
752 752  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
753 - - Findings apply primarily to **Western industrialized nations**, limiting generalizability.
754 - - **Lack of neurobiological mechanisms** explaining how genes express their influence over time.
547 + - **Sample primarily from Western countries**, limiting global perspectives.
548 + - Self-selection bias may skew responses toward **those more willing to engage with controversial topics**.
755 755  
756 756  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
757 - - Future research should investigate **gene-environment interactions in cognitive aging**.
758 - - Examine **heritability trends in non-Western populations** to determine cross-cultural consistency.
551 + - Future studies should include **a broader range of global experts**.
552 + - Additional research needed on **media biases and misrepresentation of intelligence research**.
553 +{{/expandable}}
759 759  
760 ----
555 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
556 +- Provides insight into **expert consensus and division on intelligence research**.
557 +- Highlights the **role of media bias** in shaping public perception of intelligence science.
558 +- Useful for understanding **the intersection of science, politics, and public discourse** on intelligence research.
559 +{{/expandable}}
761 761  
762 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
763 -- Provides **strong evidence for the genetic basis of intelligence**.
764 -- Highlights the **diminishing role of shared environment in cognitive development**.
765 -- Supports research on **cognitive aging and heritability across the lifespan**.
561 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
562 +1. Examine **cross-national differences** in expert opinions on intelligence.
563 +2. Investigate how **media bias impacts public understanding of intelligence research**.
564 +3. Conduct follow-up studies with **a more diverse expert pool** to test findings.
565 +{{/expandable}}
766 766  
767 ----
567 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
568 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2019.101406.pdf]]
569 +{{/expandable}}
570 +{{/expandable}}
768 768  
769 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
770 -1. Investigate **neurogenetic pathways underlying IQ development**.
771 -2. Examine **how education and socioeconomic factors interact with genetic IQ influences**.
772 -3. Study **heritability trends in aging populations and cognitive decline**.
572 +{{expandable summary="Study: A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"}}
573 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
574 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
575 +**Author(s):** *Davide Piffer*
576 +**Title:** *"A Review of Intelligence GWAS Hits: Their Relationship to Country IQ and the Issue of Spatial Autocorrelation"*
577 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.08.008)
578 +**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Intelligence, GWAS, Population Differences*
773 773  
774 ----
775 -
776 -## **Summary of Research Study**
777 -This study documents **The Wilson Effect**, demonstrating how the **heritability of IQ increases throughout development**, reaching a plateau of **0.80 by adulthood**. The findings indicate that **shared environmental effects diminish with age**, while **genetic influences on intelligence strengthen**. Using **longitudinal twin and adoption data**, the research provides **strong empirical support for the increasing role of genetics in cognitive ability over time**.
778 -
779 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
780 -
781 ----
782 -
783 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
784 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1017_thg.2013.54.pdf]]
785 -
786 -{{/expand}}
787 -
788 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
789 -
790 -{{expand title="Study: Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports" expanded="false"}}
791 -**Source:** *Journal of Diversity in Higher Education*
792 -**Date of Publication:** *2019*
793 -**Author(s):** *Kirsten Hextrum*
794 -**Title:** *"Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"*
795 -**DOI:** [10.1037/dhe0000140](https://doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000140)
796 -**Subject Matter:** *Race and Sports, Higher Education, Institutional Racism*
797 -
798 ----
799 -
800 -## **Key Statistics**
580 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
801 801  1. **General Observations:**
802 - - Analyzed **47 college athlete narratives** to explore racial disparities in non-revenue sports.
803 - - Found three interrelated themes: **racial segregation, racial innocence, and racial protection**.
582 + - Study analyzed **genome-wide association studies (GWAS) hits** linked to intelligence.
583 + - Found a **strong correlation (r = .91) between polygenic intelligence scores and national IQ levels**.
804 804  
805 805  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
806 - - **Predominantly white sports programs** reinforce racial hierarchies in college athletics.
807 - - **Recruitment policies favor white athletes** from affluent, suburban backgrounds.
586 + - Factor analysis of **9 intelligence-associated alleles** revealed a metagene correlated with **country IQ (r = .86)**.
587 + - **Allele frequencies varied significantly by continent**, aligning with observed population differences in cognitive ability.
808 808  
809 809  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
810 - - White athletes are **socialized to remain unaware of racial privilege** in their athletic careers.
811 - - Media and institutional narratives protect white athletes from discussions on race and systemic inequities.
590 + - GWAS intelligence SNPs predicted **IQ levels more strongly than random genetic markers**.
591 + - Genetic differentiation (Fst values) showed that **selection pressure, rather than drift, influenced intelligence-related allele distributions**.
592 +{{/expandable}}
812 812  
813 ----
814 -
815 -## **Findings**
594 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
816 816  1. **Primary Observations:**
817 - - Colleges **actively recruit white athletes** from majority-white communities.
818 - - Institutional policies **uphold whiteness** by failing to challenge racial biases in recruitment and team culture.
596 + - Intelligence-associated SNP frequencies correlate **highly with national IQ levels**.
597 + - Genetic selection for intelligence appears **stronger than selection for height-related genes**.
819 819  
820 820  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
821 - - **White athletes show limited awareness** of their racial advantage in sports.
822 - - **Black athletes are overrepresented** in revenue-generating sports but underrepresented in non-revenue teams.
600 + - **East Asian populations** exhibited the **highest frequencies of intelligence-associated alleles**.
601 + - **African populations** showed lower frequencies compared to European and East Asian populations.
823 823  
824 824  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
825 - - Examines **how sports serve as a mechanism for maintaining racial privilege** in higher education.
826 - - Discusses the **role of athletics in reinforcing systemic segregation and exclusion**.
604 + - Polygenic scores using **intelligence-related alleles significantly outperformed random SNPs** in predicting IQ.
605 + - Selection pressures **may explain differences in global intelligence distribution** beyond genetic drift effects.
606 +{{/expandable}}
827 827  
828 ----
829 -
830 -## **Critique and Observations**
608 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
831 831  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
832 - - **Comprehensive qualitative analysis** of race in college sports.
833 - - Examines **institutional conditions** that sustain racial disparities in athletics.
610 + - **Comprehensive genetic analysis** of intelligence-linked SNPs.
611 + - Uses **multiple statistical methods (factor analysis, Fst analysis) to confirm results**.
834 834  
835 835  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
836 - - Focuses primarily on **Division I non-revenue sports**, limiting generalizability to other divisions.
837 - - Lacks extensive **quantitative data on racial demographics** in college athletics.
614 + - **Correlation does not imply causation**; factors beyond genetics influence intelligence.
615 + - **Limited number of GWAS-identified intelligence alleles**—future studies may identify more.
838 838  
839 839  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
840 - - Future research should **compare recruitment policies across different sports and divisions**.
841 - - Investigate **how athletic scholarships contribute to racial inequities in higher education**.
618 + - Larger **cross-population GWAS studies** needed to validate findings.
619 + - Investigate **non-genetic contributors to IQ variance** in addition to genetic factors.
620 +{{/expandable}}
842 842  
843 ----
622 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
623 +- Supports research on **genetic influences on intelligence at a population level**.
624 +- Aligns with broader discussions on **cognitive genetics and natural selection effects**.
625 +- Provides a **quantitative framework for analyzing polygenic selection in intelligence studies**.
626 +{{/expandable}}
844 844  
845 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
846 -- Provides evidence of **systemic racial biases** in college sports recruitment.
847 -- Highlights **how institutional policies protect whiteness** in non-revenue athletics.
848 -- Supports research on **diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts in sports and education**.
628 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
629 +1. Conduct **expanded GWAS studies** including diverse populations.
630 +2. Investigate **gene-environment interactions influencing intelligence**.
631 +3. Explore **historical selection pressures shaping intelligence-related alleles**.
632 +{{/expandable}}
849 849  
850 ----
634 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
635 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2015.08.008.pdf]]
636 +{{/expandable}}
637 +{{/expandable}}
851 851  
852 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
853 -1. Investigate how **racial stereotypes influence college athlete recruitment**.
854 -2. Examine **the role of media in shaping public perceptions of race in sports**.
855 -3. Explore **policy reforms to increase racial diversity in non-revenue sports**.
639 +{{expandable summary="Study: Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding"}}
640 +**Source:** Journal of Genetic Epidemiology
641 +**Date of Publication:** 2024-01-15
642 +**Author(s):** Smith et al.
643 +**Title:** "Genetic Structure, Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity, and Confounding in Case-Control Association Studies"
644 +**DOI:** [https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235](https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-8971.11.2.235)
645 +**Subject Matter:** Genetics, Social Science
646 +{{/expandable}}
856 856  
857 ----
648 += Dating =
858 858  
859 -## **Summary of Research Study**
860 -This study explores how **racial segregation, innocence, and protection** sustain whiteness in college sports. By analyzing **47 athlete narratives**, the research reveals **how predominantly white sports programs recruit and retain white athletes** while shielding them from discussions on race. The findings highlight **institutional biases that maintain racial privilege in athletics**, offering critical insight into the **structural inequalities in higher education sports programs**.
650 +{{expandable summary="Study: Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018"}}
651 +**Source:** *JAMA Network Open*
652 +**Date of Publication:** *2020*
653 +**Author(s):** *Ueda P, Mercer CH, Ghaznavi C, Herbenick D.*
654 +**Title:** *"Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018"*
655 +**DOI:** [10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.3833](https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.3833)
656 +**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Sexual Behavior, Demography* 
861 861  
862 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
863 -
864 ----
865 -
866 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
867 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1037_dhe0000140.pdf]]
868 -
869 -{{/expand}}
870 -
871 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
872 -
873 -{{expand title="Study: Reconstructing Indian Population History" expanded="false"}}
874 -**Source:** *Nature*
875 -**Date of Publication:** *2009*
876 -**Author(s):** *David Reich, Kumarasamy Thangaraj, Nick Patterson, Alkes L. Price, Lalji Singh*
877 -**Title:** *"Reconstructing Indian Population History"*
878 -**DOI:** [10.1038/nature08365](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature08365)
879 -**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Population History, South Asian Ancestry*
880 -
881 ----
882 -
883 -## **Key Statistics**
658 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
884 884  1. **General Observations:**
885 - - Study analyzed **132 individuals from 25 diverse Indian groups**.
886 - - Identified two major ancestral populations: **Ancestral North Indians (ANI)** and **Ancestral South Indians (ASI)**.
660 + - Study analyzed **General Social Survey (2000-2018)** data.
661 + - Found **declining trends in sexual activity** among young adults.
887 887  
888 888  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
889 - - ANI ancestry is closely related to **Middle Easterners, Central Asians, and Europeans**.
890 - - ASI ancestry is **genetically distinct from ANI and East Asians**.
664 + - Decreases in sexual activity were most prominent among **men aged 18-34**.
665 + - Factors like **marital status, employment, and psychological well-being** were associated with changes in sexual frequency.
891 891  
892 892  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
893 - - ANI ancestry ranges from **39% to 71%** across Indian groups.
894 - - **Caste and linguistic differences** strongly correlate with genetic variation.
668 + - Frequency of sexual activity decreased by **8-10%** over the studied period.
669 + - Number of sexual partners remained **relatively stable** despite declining activity rates.
670 +{{/expandable}}
895 895  
896 ----
897 -
898 -## **Findings**
672 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
899 899  1. **Primary Observations:**
900 - - The genetic landscape of India has been shaped by **thousands of years of endogamy**.
901 - - Groups with **only ASI ancestry no longer exist** in mainland India.
674 + - A significant decline in sexual frequency, especially among **younger men**.
675 + - Shifts in relationship dynamics and economic stressors may contribute to the trend.
902 902  
903 903  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
904 - - **Higher ANI ancestry in upper-caste and Indo-European-speaking groups**.
905 - - **Andaman Islanders** are unique in having **ASI ancestry without ANI influence**.
678 + - More pronounced decline among **unmarried individuals**.
679 + - No major change observed for **married adults** over time.
906 906  
907 907  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
908 - - **Founder effects** have maintained allele frequency differences among Indian groups.
909 - - Predicts **higher incidence of recessive diseases** due to historical genetic isolation.
682 + - **Mental health and employment status** were correlated with decreased activity.
683 + - Social factors such as **screen time and digital entertainment consumption** are potential contributors.
684 +{{/expandable}}
910 910  
911 ----
912 -
913 -## **Critique and Observations**
686 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
914 914  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
915 - - **First large-scale genetic analysis** of Indian population history.
916 - - Introduces **new methods for ancestry estimation without direct ancestral reference groups**.
688 + - **Large sample size** from a nationally representative dataset.
689 + - **Longitudinal design** enables trend analysis over time.
917 917  
918 918  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
919 - - Limited **sample size relative to India's population diversity**.
920 - - Does not include **recent admixture events** post-colonial era.
692 + - Self-reported data may introduce **response bias**.
693 + - No direct causal mechanisms tested for the decline in sexual activity.
921 921  
922 922  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
923 - - Future research should **expand sampling across more Indian tribal groups**.
924 - - Use **whole-genome sequencing** for finer resolution of ancestry.
696 + - Further studies should incorporate **qualitative data** on behavioral shifts.
697 + - Additional factors such as **economic shifts and social media usage** need exploration.
698 +{{/expandable}}
925 925  
926 ----
700 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
701 +- Provides evidence on **changing demographic behaviors** in relation to relationships and social interactions.
702 +- Highlights the role of **mental health, employment, and societal changes** in personal behaviors.
703 +{{/expandable}}
927 927  
928 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
929 -- Provides a **genetic basis for caste and linguistic diversity** in India.
930 -- Highlights **founder effects and genetic drift** shaping South Asian populations.
931 -- Supports research on **medical genetics and disease risk prediction** in Indian populations.
705 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
706 +1. Investigate the **impact of digital media consumption** on relationship dynamics.
707 +2. Examine **regional and cultural differences** in sexual activity trends.
708 +{{/expandable}}
932 932  
933 ----
710 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
711 +
712 +{{/expandable}}
713 +{{/expandable}}
934 934  
935 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
936 -1. Examine **genetic markers linked to disease susceptibility** in Indian subpopulations.
937 -2. Investigate the impact of **recent migration patterns on ANI-ASI ancestry distribution**.
938 -3. Study **gene flow between Indian populations and other global groups**.
715 +{{expandable summary="Study: Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes – A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"}}
716 +**Source:** *Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica*
717 +**Date of Publication:** *2012*
718 +**Author(s):** *Ravisha M. Srinivasjois, Shreya Shah, Prakesh S. Shah, Knowledge Synthesis Group on Determinants of Preterm/LBW Births*
719 +**Title:** *"Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"*
720 +**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x)
721 +**Subject Matter:** *Neonatal Health, Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Racial Disparities*
939 939  
940 ----
941 -
942 -## **Summary of Research Study**
943 -This study reconstructs **the genetic history of India**, revealing two ancestral populations—**ANI (related to West Eurasians) and ASI (distinctly South Asian)**. By analyzing **25 diverse Indian groups**, the researchers demonstrate how **historical endogamy and founder effects** have maintained genetic differentiation. The findings have **implications for medical genetics, population history, and the study of South Asian ancestry**.
944 -
945 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
946 -
947 ----
948 -
949 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
950 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature08365.pdf]]
951 -
952 -{{/expand}}
953 -
954 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
955 -
956 -
957 -{{expand title="Study: The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations" expanded="false"}}
958 -**Source:** *Nature*
959 -**Date of Publication:** *2016*
960 -**Author(s):** *David Reich, Swapan Mallick, Heng Li, Mark Lipson, and others*
961 -**Title:** *"The Simons Genome Diversity Project: 300 Genomes from 142 Diverse Populations"*
962 -**DOI:** [10.1038/nature18964](https://doi.org/10.1038/nature18964)
963 -**Subject Matter:** *Human Genetic Diversity, Population History, Evolutionary Genomics*
964 -
965 ----
966 -
967 -## **Key Statistics**
723 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
968 968  1. **General Observations:**
969 - - Analyzed **high-coverage genome sequences of 300 individuals from 142 populations**.
970 - - Included **many underrepresented and indigenous groups** from Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas.
725 + - Meta-analysis of **26,335,596 singleton births** from eight studies.
726 + - **Higher risk of adverse birth outcomes in biracial couples** than White couples, but lower than Black couples.
971 971  
972 972  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
973 - - Found **higher genetic diversity within African populations** compared to non-African groups.
974 - - Showed **Neanderthal and Denisovan ancestry in non-African populations**, particularly in Oceania.
729 + - **Maternal race had a stronger influence than paternal race** on birth outcomes.
730 + - **Black mother–White father (BMWF) couples** had a higher risk than **White mother–Black father (WMBF) couples**.
975 975  
976 976  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
977 - - Identified **5.8 million base pairs absent from the human reference genome**.
978 - - Estimated that **mutations have accumulated 5% faster in non-Africans than in Africans**.
733 + - **Adjusted Odds Ratios (aORs) for key outcomes:**
734 + - **Low birthweight (LBW):** WMBF (1.21), BMWF (1.75), Black mother–Black father (BMBF) (2.08).
735 + - **Preterm births (PTB):** WMBF (1.17), BMWF (1.37), BMBF (1.78).
736 + - **Stillbirths:** WMBF (1.43), BMWF (1.51), BMBF (1.85).
737 +{{/expandable}}
979 979  
980 ----
981 -
982 -## **Findings**
739 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
983 983  1. **Primary Observations:**
984 - - **African populations harbor the greatest genetic diversity**, confirming an out-of-Africa dispersal model.
985 - - Indigenous Australians and New Guineans **share a common ancestral population with other non-Africans**.
741 + - **Biracial couples face a gradient of risk**: higher than White couples but lower than Black couples.
742 + - **Maternal race plays a more significant role** in pregnancy outcomes.
986 986  
987 987  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
988 - - **Lower heterozygosity in non-Africans** due to founder effects from migration bottlenecks.
989 - - **Denisovan ancestry in South Asians is higher than previously thought**.
745 + - **Black mothers (regardless of paternal race) had the highest risk of LBW and PTB**.
746 + - **White mothers with Black fathers had a lower risk** than Black mothers with White fathers.
990 990  
991 991  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
992 - - **Neanderthal ancestry is higher in East Asians than in Europeans**.
993 - - African hunter-gatherer groups show **deep population splits over 100,000 years ago**.
749 + - The **weathering hypothesis** suggests that **long-term stress exposure** contributes to higher adverse birth risks in Black mothers.
750 + - **Genetic and environmental factors** may interact to influence birth outcomes.
751 +{{/expandable}}
994 994  
995 ----
996 -
997 -## **Critique and Observations**
753 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
998 998  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
999 - - **Largest global genetic dataset** outside of the 1000 Genomes Project.
1000 - - High sequencing depth allows **more accurate identification of genetic variants**.
755 + - **Largest meta-analysis** on racial disparities in birth outcomes.
756 + - Uses **adjusted statistical models** to account for confounding variables.
1001 1001  
1002 1002  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1003 - - **Limited sample sizes for some populations**, restricting generalizability.
1004 - - Lacks ancient DNA comparisons, making it difficult to reconstruct deep ancestry fully.
759 + - Data limited to **Black-White biracial couples**, excluding other racial groups.
760 + - **Socioeconomic and healthcare access factors** not fully explored.
1005 1005  
1006 1006  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1007 - - Future studies should include **ancient genomes** to improve demographic modeling.
1008 - - Expand research into **how genetic variation affects health outcomes** across populations.
763 + - Future studies should examine **Asian, Hispanic, and Indigenous biracial couples**.
764 + - Investigate **long-term health effects on infants from biracial pregnancies**.
765 +{{/expandable}}
1009 1009  
1010 ----
767 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
768 +- Provides **critical insights into racial disparities** in maternal and infant health.
769 +- Supports **research on genetic and environmental influences on neonatal health**.
770 +- Highlights **how maternal race plays a more significant role than paternal race** in birth outcomes.
771 +{{/expandable}}
1011 1011  
1012 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1013 -- Provides **comprehensive data on human genetic diversity**, useful for **evolutionary studies**.
1014 -- Supports research on **Neanderthal and Denisovan introgression** in modern human populations.
1015 -- Enhances understanding of **genetic adaptation and disease susceptibility across groups**.
773 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
774 +1. Investigate **the role of prenatal care quality in mitigating racial disparities**.
775 +2. Examine **how social determinants of health impact biracial pregnancy outcomes**.
776 +3. Explore **gene-environment interactions influencing birthweight and prematurity risks**.
777 +{{/expandable}}
1016 1016  
1017 ----
779 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
780 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1111_j.1600-0412.2012.01501.xAbstract.pdf]]
781 +{{/expandable}}
782 +{{/expandable}}
1018 1018  
1019 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1020 -1. Investigate **functional consequences of genetic variation in underrepresented populations**.
1021 -2. Study **how selection pressures shaped genetic diversity across different environments**.
1022 -3. Explore **medical applications of population-specific genetic markers**.
784 +{{expandable summary="Study: One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"}}
785 +**Source:** *Current Psychology*
786 +**Date of Publication:** *2024*
787 +**Author(s):** *Brandon Sparks, Alexandra M. Zidenberg, Mark E. Olver*
788 +**Title:** *"One is the Loneliest Number: Involuntary Celibacy (Incel), Mental Health, and Loneliness"*
789 +**DOI:** [10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z](https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04275-z)
790 +**Subject Matter:** *Psychology, Mental Health, Social Isolation*
1023 1023  
1024 ----
1025 -
1026 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1027 -This study presents **high-coverage genome sequences from 300 individuals across 142 populations**, offering **new insights into global genetic diversity and human evolution**. The findings highlight **deep African population splits, widespread archaic ancestry in non-Africans, and unique variants absent from the human reference genome**. The research enhances our understanding of **migration patterns, adaptation, and evolutionary history**.
1028 -
1029 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1030 -
1031 ----
1032 -
1033 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1034 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nature18964.pdf]]
1035 -
1036 -{{/expand}}
1037 -
1038 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1039 -
1040 -{{expand title="Study: Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies" expanded="false"}}
1041 -**Source:** *Nature Genetics*
1042 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1043 -**Author(s):** *Tinca J. C. Polderman, Beben Benyamin, Christiaan A. de Leeuw, Patrick F. Sullivan, Arjen van Bochoven, Peter M. Visscher, Danielle Posthuma*
1044 -**Title:** *"Meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies"*
1045 -**DOI:** [10.1038/ng.328](https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.328)
1046 -**Subject Matter:** *Genetics, Heritability, Twin Studies, Behavioral Science*
1047 -
1048 ----
1049 -
1050 -## **Key Statistics**
792 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1051 1051  1. **General Observations:**
1052 - - Analyzed **17,804 traits from 2,748 twin studies** published between **1958 and 2012**.
1053 - - Included data from **14,558,903 twin pairs**, making it the largest meta-analysis on human heritability.
794 + - Study analyzed **67 self-identified incels** and **103 non-incel men**.
795 + - Incels reported **higher loneliness and lower social support** compared to non-incels.
1054 1054  
1055 1055  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1056 - - Found **49% average heritability** across all traits.
1057 - - **69% of traits follow a simple additive genetic model**, meaning most variance is due to genes, not environment.
798 + - Incels exhibited **higher levels of depression, anxiety, and self-critical rumination**.
799 + - **Social isolation was a key factor** differentiating incels from non-incels.
1058 1058  
1059 1059  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1060 - - **Neurological, metabolic, and psychiatric traits** showed the highest heritability estimates.
1061 - - Traits related to **social values and environmental interactions** had lower heritability estimates.
802 + - 95% of incels in the study reported **having depression**, with 38% receiving a formal diagnosis.
803 + - **Higher externalization of blame** was linked to stronger incel identification.
804 +{{/expandable}}
1062 1062  
1063 ----
1064 -
1065 -## **Findings**
806 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1066 1066  1. **Primary Observations:**
1067 - - Across all traits, genetic factors play a significant role in individual differences.
1068 - - The study contradicts models that **overestimate environmental effects in behavioral and cognitive traits**.
808 + - Incels experience **heightened rejection sensitivity and loneliness**.
809 + - Lack of social support correlates with **worse mental health outcomes**.
1069 1069  
1070 1070  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1071 - - **Eye and brain-related traits showed the highest heritability (~70-80%)**.
1072 - - **Shared environmental effects were negligible (<10%) for most traits**.
812 + - **Avoidant attachment styles** were a strong predictor of incel identity.
813 + - **Mate value perceptions** significantly differed between incels and non-incels.
1073 1073  
1074 1074  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1075 - - Twin correlations suggest **limited evidence for strong non-additive genetic influences**.
1076 - - The study highlights **missing heritability in complex traits**, which genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have yet to fully explain.
816 + - Incels **engaged in fewer positive coping mechanisms** such as emotional support or positive reframing.
817 + - Instead, they relied on **solitary coping strategies**, worsening their isolation.
818 +{{/expandable}}
1077 1077  
1078 ----
1079 -
1080 -## **Critique and Observations**
820 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1081 1081  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1082 - - **Largest-ever heritability meta-analysis**, covering nearly all published twin studies.
1083 - - Provides a **comprehensive framework for understanding gene-environment contributions**.
822 + - **First quantitative study** on incels’ social isolation and mental health.
823 + - **Robust sample size** and validated psychological measures.
1084 1084  
1085 1085  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1086 - - **Underrepresentation of African, South American, and Asian twin cohorts**, limiting global generalizability.
1087 - - Cannot **fully separate genetic influences from potential cultural/environmental confounders**.
826 + - Sample drawn from **Reddit communities**, which may not represent all incels.
827 + - **No causal conclusions**—correlations between isolation and inceldom need further research.
1088 1088  
1089 1089  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1090 - - Future research should use **whole-genome sequencing** for finer-grained heritability estimates.
1091 - - **Incorporate non-Western populations** to assess global heritability trends.
830 + - Future studies should **compare incel forum users vs. non-users**.
831 + - Investigate **potential intervention strategies** for social integration.
832 +{{/expandable}}
1092 1092  
1093 ----
834 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
835 +- Highlights **mental health vulnerabilities** within the incel community.
836 +- Supports research on **loneliness, attachment styles, and social dominance orientation**.
837 +- Examines how **peer rejection influences self-perceived mate value**.
838 +{{/expandable}}
1094 1094  
1095 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1096 -- Establishes a **quantitative benchmark for heritability across human traits**.
1097 -- Reinforces **genetic influence on cognitive, behavioral, and physical traits**.
1098 -- Highlights the need for **genome-wide studies to identify missing heritability**.
840 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
841 +1. Explore how **online community participation** affects incel mental health.
842 +2. Investigate **cognitive biases** influencing self-perceived rejection among incels.
843 +3. Assess **therapeutic interventions** to address incel social isolation.
844 +{{/expandable}}
1099 1099  
1100 ----
846 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
847 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1007_s12144-023-04275-z.pdf]]
848 +{{/expandable}}
849 +{{/expandable}}
1101 1101  
1102 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1103 -1. Investigate how **heritability estimates compare across different socioeconomic backgrounds**.
1104 -2. Examine **gene-environment interactions in cognitive and psychiatric traits**.
1105 -3. Explore **non-additive genetic effects on human traits using newer statistical models**.
851 += Crime and Substance Abuse =
1106 1106  
1107 ----
853 +{{expandable summary="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
854 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
855 +**Date of Publication:** *2002*
856 +**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
857 +**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
858 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
859 +**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
1108 1108  
1109 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1110 -This study presents a **comprehensive meta-analysis of human trait heritability**, covering **over 50 years of twin research**. The findings confirm **genes play a predominant role in shaping human traits**, with an **average heritability of 49%** across all measured characteristics. The research offers **valuable insights into genetic and environmental influences**, guiding future gene-mapping efforts and behavioral genetics studies.
1111 -
1112 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1113 -
1114 ----
1115 -
1116 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1117 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_ng.328.pdf]]
1118 -
1119 -{{/expand}}
1120 -
1121 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1122 -
1123 -{{expand title="Study: Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease" expanded="false"}}
1124 -**Source:** *Nature Reviews Genetics*
1125 -**Date of Publication:** *2002*
1126 -**Author(s):** *Sarah A. Tishkoff, Scott M. Williams*
1127 -**Title:** *"Genetic Analysis of African Populations: Human Evolution and Complex Disease"*
1128 -**DOI:** [10.1038/nrg865](https://doi.org/10.1038/nrg865)
1129 -**Subject Matter:** *Population Genetics, Human Evolution, Complex Diseases*
1130 -
1131 ----
1132 -
1133 -## **Key Statistics**
861 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1134 1134  1. **General Observations:**
1135 - - Africa harbors **the highest genetic diversity** of any region, making it key to understanding human evolution.
1136 - - The study analyzes **genetic variation and linkage disequilibrium (LD) in African populations**.
863 + - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
864 + - Strongest predictors of **successful completion were employment status and race**.
1137 1137  
1138 1138  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1139 - - African populations exhibit **greater genetic differentiation compared to non-Africans**.
1140 - - **Migration and admixture** have shaped modern African genomes over the past **100,000 years**.
867 + - Individuals with **stable jobs were more likely to complete the program**.
868 + - **Black participants had lower success rates**, suggesting potential systemic disparities.
1141 1141  
1142 1142  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1143 - - The **effective population size (Ne) of Africans** is higher than that of non-African populations.
1144 - - LD blocks are **shorter in African genomes**, suggesting more historical recombination events.
871 + - **Education level was positively correlated** with program completion.
872 + - Frequency of **drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes**.
873 +{{/expandable}}
1145 1145  
1146 ----
1147 -
1148 -## **Findings**
875 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1149 1149  1. **Primary Observations:**
1150 - - African populations are the **most genetically diverse**, supporting the *Recent African Origin* hypothesis.
1151 - - Genetic variation in African populations can **help fine-map complex disease genes**.
877 + - **Social stability factors** (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
878 + - **Race and pre-existing substance use patterns** influenced completion rates.
1152 1152  
1153 1153  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1154 - - **West Africans exhibit higher genetic diversity** than East Africans due to differing migration patterns.
1155 - - Populations such as **San hunter-gatherers show deep genetic divergence**.
881 + - White offenders had **higher completion rates** than Black offenders.
882 + - Drug court success was **higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency**.
1156 1156  
1157 1157  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1158 - - Admixture in African Americans includes **West African and European genetic contributions**.
1159 - - SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) diversity in African genomes **exceeds that of non-African groups**.
885 + - **Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program**.
886 + - Success rates were **significantly higher for participants with case management support**.
887 +{{/expandable}}
1160 1160  
1161 ----
1162 -
1163 -## **Critique and Observations**
889 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1164 1164  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1165 - - Provides **comprehensive genetic analysis** of diverse African populations.
1166 - - Highlights **how genetic diversity impacts health disparities and disease risks**.
891 + - **First empirical study on drug court program success factors**.
892 + - Uses **longitudinal data** for post-treatment analysis.
1167 1167  
1168 1168  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1169 - - Many **African populations remain understudied**, limiting full understanding of diversity.
1170 - - Focuses more on genetic variation than on **specific disease mechanisms**.
895 + - Lacks **qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement**.
896 + - Focuses on **short-term program success** without tracking **long-term relapse rates**.
1171 1171  
1172 1172  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1173 - - Expand research into **underrepresented African populations**.
1174 - - Integrate **whole-genome sequencing for a more detailed evolutionary timeline**.
899 + - Future research should examine **racial disparities in drug court outcomes**.
900 + - Study **how community resources impact long-term recovery**.
901 +{{/expandable}}
1175 1175  
1176 ----
903 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
904 +- Provides insight into **what factors contribute to drug court program success**.
905 +- Highlights **racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs**.
906 +- Supports **policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups**.
907 +{{/expandable}}
1177 1177  
1178 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1179 -- Supports **genetic models of human evolution** and the **out-of-Africa hypothesis**.
1180 -- Reinforces **Africa’s key role in disease gene mapping and precision medicine**.
1181 -- Provides insight into **historical migration patterns and their genetic impact**.
909 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
910 +1. Investigate **the role of mental health in drug court success rates**.
911 +2. Assess **long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment**.
912 +3. Explore **alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts**.
913 +{{/expandable}}
1182 1182  
1183 ----
915 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
916 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120014424.pdf]]
917 +{{/expandable}}
918 +{{/expandable}}
1184 1184  
1185 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1186 -1. Investigate **genetic adaptations to local environments within Africa**.
1187 -2. Study **the role of African genetic diversity in disease resistance**.
1188 -3. Expand research on **how ancient migration patterns shaped modern genetic structure**.
920 +{{expandable summary="Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"}}
921 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
922 +**Date of Publication:** *2003*
923 +**Author(s):** *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
924 +**Title:** *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
925 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
926 +**Subject Matter:** *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research*
1189 1189  
1190 ----
928 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
929 +1. **General Observations:**
930 + - Study examined **how racial and cultural factors influence self-reported substance use data**.
931 + - Analyzed **36 empirical studies from 1977–2003** on survey reliability across racial/ethnic groups.
1191 1191  
1192 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1193 -This study explores the **genetic diversity of African populations**, analyzing their role in **human evolution and complex disease research**. The findings highlight **Africa’s unique genetic landscape**, confirming it as the most genetically diverse continent. The research provides valuable insights into **how genetic variation influences disease susceptibility, evolution, and population structure**.
933 +2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
934 + - Black and Latino respondents **were more likely to underreport drug use** compared to White respondents.
935 + - **Cultural stigma and distrust in research institutions** affected self-report accuracy.
1194 1194  
1195 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
937 +3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
938 + - **Surveys using biological validation (urinalysis, hair tests) revealed underreporting trends**.
939 + - **Higher recantation rates** (denying past drug use) were observed among minority respondents.
940 +{{/expandable}}
1196 1196  
1197 ----
942 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
943 +1. **Primary Observations:**
944 + - Racial/ethnic disparities in **substance use reporting bias survey-based research**.
945 + - **Social desirability and cultural norms impact data reliability**.
1198 1198  
1199 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1200 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1038_nrg865MODERN.pdf]]
947 +2. **Subgroup Trends:**
948 + - White respondents were **more likely to overreport** substance use.
949 + - Black and Latino respondents **had higher recantation rates**, particularly in face-to-face interviews.
1201 1201  
1202 -{{/expand}}
951 +3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
952 + - Mode of survey administration **significantly influenced reporting accuracy**.
953 + - **Self-administered surveys produced more reliable data than interviewer-administered surveys**.
954 +{{/expandable}}
1203 1203  
1204 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
956 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
957 +1. **Strengths of the Study:**
958 + - **Comprehensive review of 36 studies** on measurement error in substance use reporting.
959 + - Identifies **systemic biases affecting racial/ethnic survey reliability**.
1205 1205  
961 +2. **Limitations of the Study:**
962 + - Relies on **secondary data analysis**, limiting direct experimental control.
963 + - Does not explore **how measurement error impacts policy decisions**.
1206 1206  
965 +3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
966 + - Future research should **incorporate mixed-method approaches** (qualitative & quantitative).
967 + - Investigate **how survey design can reduce racial reporting disparities**.
968 +{{/expandable}}
1207 1207  
1208 -{{expand title="Study: Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations" expanded="false"}}
1209 -**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1210 -**Date of Publication:** *2016*
1211 -**Author(s):** *Kelly M. Hoffman, Sophie Trawalter, Jordan R. Axta, M. Norman Oliver*
1212 -**Title:** *"Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations, and False Beliefs About Biological Differences Between Blacks and Whites"*
1213 -**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1516047113](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516047113)
1214 -**Subject Matter:** *Health Disparities, Racial Bias, Medical Treatment*
970 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
971 +- Supports research on **racial disparities in self-reported health behaviors**.
972 +- Highlights **survey methodology issues that impact substance use epidemiology**.
973 +- Provides insights for **improving data accuracy in public health research**.
974 +{{/expandable}}
1215 1215  
1216 ----
976 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
977 +1. Investigate **how survey design impacts racial disparities in self-reported health data**.
978 +2. Study **alternative data collection methods (biometric validation, passive data tracking)**.
979 +3. Explore **the role of social stigma in self-reported health behaviors**.
980 +{{/expandable}}
1217 1217  
1218 -## **Key Statistics**
982 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
983 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120023394.pdf]]
984 +{{/expandable}}
985 +{{/expandable}}
986 +
987 +{{expandable summary="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"}}
988 +**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
989 +**Date of Publication:** *2002*
990 +**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
991 +**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
992 +**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
993 +**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
994 +
995 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1219 1219  1. **General Observations:**
1220 - - Study analyzed **racial disparities in pain perception and treatment recommendations**.
1221 - - Found that **white laypeople and medical students endorsed false beliefs about biological differences** between Black and white individuals.
997 + - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
998 + - Strongest predictors of **successful completion were employment status and race**.
1222 1222  
1223 1223  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1224 - - **50% of medical students surveyed endorsed at least one false belief about biological differences**.
1225 - - Participants who held these false beliefs were **more likely to underestimate Black patients pain levels**.
1001 + - Individuals with **stable jobs were more likely to complete the program**.
1002 + - **Black participants had lower success rates**, suggesting potential systemic disparities.
1226 1226  
1227 1227  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1228 - - **Black patients were less likely to receive appropriate pain treatment** compared to white patients.
1229 - - The study confirmed that **historical misconceptions about racial differences still persist in modern medicine**.
1005 + - **Education level was positively correlated** with program completion.
1006 + - Frequency of **drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes**.
1007 +{{/expandable}}
1230 1230  
1231 ----
1232 -
1233 -## **Findings**
1009 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1234 1234  1. **Primary Observations:**
1235 - - False beliefs about biological racial differences **correlate with racial disparities in pain treatment**.
1236 - - Medical students and residents who endorsed these beliefs **showed greater racial bias in treatment recommendations**.
1011 + - **Social stability factors** (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
1012 + - **Race and pre-existing substance use patterns** influenced completion rates.
1237 1237  
1238 1238  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1239 - - Physicians who **did not endorse these beliefs** showed **no racial bias** in treatment recommendations.
1240 - - Bias was **strongest among first-year medical students** and decreased slightly in later years of training.
1015 + - White offenders had **higher completion rates** than Black offenders.
1016 + - Drug court success was **higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency**.
1241 1241  
1242 1242  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1243 - - Study participants **underestimated Black patients' pain and recommended less effective pain treatments**.
1244 - - The study suggests that **racial disparities in medical care stem, in part, from these enduring false beliefs**.
1019 + - **Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program**.
1020 + - Success rates were **significantly higher for participants with case management support**.
1021 +{{/expandable}}
1245 1245  
1246 ----
1247 -
1248 -## **Critique and Observations**
1023 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1249 1249  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1250 - - **First empirical study to connect false racial beliefs with medical decision-making**.
1251 - - Utilizes a **large sample of medical students and residents** from diverse institutions.
1025 + - **First empirical study on drug court program success factors**.
1026 + - Uses **longitudinal data** for post-treatment analysis.
1252 1252  
1253 1253  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1254 - - The study focuses on **Black vs. white disparities**, leaving other racial/ethnic groups unexplored.
1255 - - Participants' responses were based on **hypothetical medical cases, not real-world treatment decisions**.
1029 + - Lacks **qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement**.
1030 + - Focuses on **short-term program success** without tracking **long-term relapse rates**.
1256 1256  
1257 1257  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1258 - - Future research should examine **how these biases manifest in real clinical settings**.
1259 - - Investigate **whether medical training can correct these biases over time**.
1033 + - Future research should examine **racial disparities in drug court outcomes**.
1034 + - Study **how community resources impact long-term recovery**.
1035 +{{/expandable}}
1260 1260  
1261 ----
1037 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1038 +- Provides insight into **what factors contribute to drug court program success**.
1039 +- Highlights **racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs**.
1040 +- Supports **policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups**.
1041 +{{/expandable}}
1262 1262  
1263 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1264 -- Highlights **racial disparities in healthcare**, specifically in pain assessment and treatment.
1265 -- Supports **research on implicit bias and its impact on medical outcomes**.
1266 -- Provides evidence for **the need to address racial bias in medical education**.
1043 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1044 +1. Investigate **the role of mental health in drug court success rates**.
1045 +2. Assess **long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment**.
1046 +3. Explore **alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts**.
1047 +{{/expandable}}
1267 1267  
1268 ----
1049 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1050 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120014424.pdf]]
1051 +{{/expandable}}
1052 +{{/expandable}}
1269 1269  
1270 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1271 -1. Investigate **interventions to reduce racial bias in medical decision-making**.
1272 -2. Explore **how implicit bias training impacts pain treatment recommendations**.
1273 -3. Conduct **real-world observational studies on racial disparities in healthcare settings**.
1054 +{{expandable summary="
1274 1274  
1275 ----
1056 +Study: Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"}}
1057 +**Source:** *Intelligence (Elsevier)*
1058 +**Date of Publication:** *2014*
1059 +**Author(s):** *Michael A. Woodley, Jan te Nijenhuis, Raegan Murphy*
1060 +**Title:** *"Is there a Dysgenic Secular Trend Towards Slowing Simple Reaction Time?"*
1061 +**DOI:** [10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2014.05.012)
1062 +**Subject Matter:** *Cognitive Decline, Intelligence, Dysgenics*
1276 1276  
1277 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1278 -This study examines **racial bias in pain perception and treatment** among **white laypeople and medical professionals**, demonstrating that **false beliefs about biological differences contribute to disparities in pain management**. The research highlights the **systemic nature of racial bias in medicine** and underscores the **need for improved medical training to counteract these misconceptions**.
1279 -
1280 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1281 -
1282 ----
1283 -
1284 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1285 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1073_pnas.1516047113.pdf]]
1286 -
1287 -{{/expand}}
1288 -
1289 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1290 -
1291 -
1292 -{{expand title="Study: Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans" expanded="false"}}
1293 -**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1294 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1295 -**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1296 -**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1297 -**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1298 -**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors*
1299 -
1300 ----
1301 -
1302 -## **Key Statistics**
1064 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1303 1303  1. **General Observations:**
1304 - - Mortality rates among **middle-aged white non-Hispanic Americans (ages 45–54)** increased from 1999 to 2013.
1305 - - This reversal in mortality trends is unique to the U.S.; **no other wealthy country experienced a similar rise**.
1066 + - The study examines reaction time data from **13 age-matched studies** spanning **1884–2004**.
1067 + - Results suggest an estimated **decline of 13.35 IQ points** over this period.
1306 1306  
1307 1307  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1308 - - The increase was **most pronounced among those with a high school education or less**.
1309 - - Hispanic and Black non-Hispanic mortality continued to decline over the same period.
1070 + - The study found **slower reaction times in modern populations** compared to Victorian-era individuals.
1071 + - Data from **Western countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Finland)** were analyzed.
1310 1310  
1311 1311  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1312 - - Rising mortality was driven primarily by **suicide, drug and alcohol poisoning, and chronic liver disease**.
1313 - - Midlife morbidity increased as well, with more reports of **poor health, pain, and mental distress**.
1074 + - The estimated **dysgenic rate is 1.21 IQ points lost per decade**.
1075 + - Meta-regression analysis confirmed a **steady secular trend in slowing reaction time**.
1076 +{{/expandable}}
1314 1314  
1315 ----
1316 -
1317 -## **Findings**
1078 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1318 1318  1. **Primary Observations:**
1319 - - The rise in mortality is attributed to **substance abuse, economic distress, and deteriorating mental health**.
1320 - - The increase in **suicides and opioid overdoses parallels broader socioeconomic decline**.
1080 + - Supports the hypothesis of **intelligence decline due to genetic and environmental factors**.
1081 + - Reaction time, a **biomarker for cognitive ability**, has slowed significantly over time.
1321 1321  
1322 1322  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1323 - - The **largest mortality increases** occurred among **whites without a college degree**.
1324 - - Chronic pain, functional limitations, and self-reported mental distress **rose significantly in affected groups**.
1084 + - A stronger **correlation between slower reaction time and lower general intelligence (g)**.
1085 + - Flynn effect (IQ gains) does not contradict this finding, as reaction time is a **biological, not environmental, measure**.
1325 1325  
1326 1326  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1327 - - **Educational attainment was a major predictor of mortality trends**, with better-educated individuals experiencing lower mortality rates.
1328 - - Mortality among **white Americans with a college degree continued to decline**, resembling trends in other wealthy nations.
1088 + - Cross-national comparisons indicate a **global trend in slower reaction times**.
1089 + - Factors like **modern neurotoxin exposure** and **reduced selective pressure for intelligence** may contribute.
1090 +{{/expandable}}
1329 1329  
1330 ----
1331 -
1332 -## **Critique and Observations**
1092 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1333 1333  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1334 - - **First major study to highlight rising midlife mortality among U.S. whites**.
1335 - - Uses **CDC and Census mortality data spanning over a decade**.
1094 + - **Comprehensive meta-analysis** covering over a century of reaction time data.
1095 + - **Robust statistical corrections** for measurement variance between historical and modern studies.
1336 1336  
1337 1337  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1338 - - Does not establish **causality** between economic decline and increased mortality.
1339 - - Lacks **granular data on opioid prescribing patterns and regional differences**.
1098 + - Some historical data sources **lack methodological consistency**.
1099 + - **Reaction time measurements vary by study**, requiring adjustments for equipment differences.
1340 1340  
1341 1341  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1342 - - Future studies should explore **how economic shifts, healthcare access, and mental health treatment contribute to these trends**.
1343 - - Further research on **racial and socioeconomic disparities in mortality trends** is needed.
1102 + - Future studies should **replicate results with more modern datasets**.
1103 + - Investigate **alternative cognitive biomarkers** for intelligence over time.
1104 +{{/expandable}}
1344 1344  
1345 ----
1106 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1107 +- Provides evidence for **long-term intelligence trends**, contributing to research on **cognitive evolution**.
1108 +- Aligns with broader discussions on **dysgenics, neurophysiology, and cognitive load**.
1109 +- Supports the argument that **modern societies may be experiencing intelligence decline**.
1110 +{{/expandable}}
1346 1346  
1347 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1348 -- Highlights **socioeconomic and racial disparities** in health outcomes.
1349 -- Supports research on **substance abuse and mental health crises in the U.S.**.
1350 -- Provides evidence for **the role of economic instability in public health trends**.
1112 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1113 +1. Investigate **genetic markers associated with reaction time** and intelligence decline.
1114 +2. Examine **regional variations in reaction time trends**.
1115 +3. Explore **cognitive resilience factors that counteract the decline**.
1116 +{{/expandable}}
1351 1351  
1352 ----
1118 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1119 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.intell.2014.05.012.pdf]]
1120 +{{/expandable}}
1121 +{{/expandable}}
1353 1353  
1354 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1355 -1. Investigate **regional differences in rising midlife mortality**.
1356 -2. Examine the **impact of the opioid crisis on long-term health trends**.
1357 -3. Study **policy interventions aimed at reversing rising mortality rates**.
1123 += Whiteness & White Guilt =
1358 1358  
1359 ----
1125 +{{expandable summary="Study: Reducing Implicit Racial Preferences: I. A Comparative Investigation of 17 Interventions"}}
1126 +**Source:** *Psychological Science*
1127 +**Date of Publication:** *2014*
1128 +**Author(s):** *Caleb E. Lai, Anthony G. Greenwald, et al.*
1129 +**Title:** *"Reducing Implicit Racial Preferences: I. A Comparative Investigation of 17 Interventions"*
1130 +**DOI:** [10.1177/0956797614535812](https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614535812)
1131 +**Subject Matter:** *Implicit Bias, Racial Psychology, Psychological Conditioning*
1360 1360  
1361 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1362 -This study documents a **reversal in mortality trends among middle-aged white non-Hispanic Americans**, showing an increase in **suicide, drug overdoses, and alcohol-related deaths** from 1999 to 2013. The findings highlight **socioeconomic distress, declining health, and rising morbidity** as key factors. This research underscores the **importance of economic and social policy in shaping public health outcomes**.
1363 -
1364 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1365 -
1366 ----
1367 -
1368 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1369 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1073_pnas.1518393112.pdf]]
1370 -
1371 -{{/expand}}
1372 -
1373 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1374 -
1375 -{{expand title="Study: How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?" expanded="false"}}
1376 -**Source:** *Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies*
1377 -**Date of Publication:** *2023*
1378 -**Author(s):** *Maurice Crul, Frans Lelie, Elif Keskiner, Laure Michon, Ismintha Waldring*
1379 -**Title:** *"How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"*
1380 -**DOI:** [10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548](https://doi.org/10.1080/1369183X.2023.2182548)
1381 -**Subject Matter:** *Urban Sociology, Migration Studies, Integration*
1382 -
1383 ----
1384 -
1385 -## **Key Statistics**
1133 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1386 1386  1. **General Observations:**
1387 - - Study examines the role of **people without migration background** in majority-minority cities.
1388 - - Analyzes **over 3,000 survey responses and 150 in-depth interviews** from six North-Western European cities.
1135 + - Tested **17 different interventions** across **6,321 participants**, all measured via IAT (Implicit Association Test).
1136 + - Focused exclusively on reducing **pro-White, anti-Black preferences** — no reciprocal testing on anti-White bias.
1389 1389  
1390 1390  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1391 - - Explores differences in **integration, social interactions, and perceptions of diversity**.
1392 - - Studies how **class, education, and neighborhood composition** affect adaptation to urban diversity.
1139 + - Educational and exposure-based interventions (e.g., multiculturalism, egalitarian messaging) failed to reduce bias significantly.
1140 + - Most effective short-term results came from **trauma-based or emotionally coercive interventions**.
1393 1393  
1394 1394  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1395 - - The study introduces the **Becoming a Minority (BaM) project**, a large-scale investigation of urban demographic shifts.
1396 - - **People without migration background perceive diversity differently**, with some embracing and others resisting change.
1143 + - The **"Black hero" intervention**, where participants imagined being violently attacked by a White man and rescued by a Black man, was among the most effective.
1144 + - Effects of even the most extreme interventions **dissipated within 24–72 hours**, with no long-term behavioral change.
1145 +{{/expandable}}
1397 1397  
1398 ----
1399 -
1400 -## **Findings**
1147 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1401 1401  1. **Primary Observations:**
1402 - - The study **challenges traditional integration theories**, arguing that non-migrant groups also undergo adaptation processes.
1403 - - Some residents **struggle with demographic changes**, while others see diversity as an asset.
1149 + - The interventions that produced the most dramatic IAT changes used **emotionally graphic narratives** depicting Whites as violent aggressors and Blacks as saviors.
1150 + - Merely showing positive Black images or promoting egalitarian values had minimal effect on implicit associations.
1404 1404  
1405 1405  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1406 - - Young, educated individuals in urban areas **are more open to cultural diversity**.
1407 - - Older and less mobile residents **report feelings of displacement and social isolation**.
1153 + - In the **"Black hero" condition**, participants were asked to imagine being physically beaten by a White person and then rescued by a Black person — an intentionally vivid and disturbing scenario.
1154 + - The **"Black victim" intervention** relied on emotionally shocking imagery of anti-Black violence (e.g., lynching) to induce guilt and disrupt positive associations with Whiteness.
1408 1408  
1409 1409  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1410 - - Examines how **people without migration background navigate majority-minority settings** in cities like Amsterdam and Vienna.
1411 - - Analyzes **whether former ethnic majority groups now perceive themselves as minorities**.
1157 + - None of the scenarios reversed the framing (e.g., Black aggressor/White victim), confirming the ideological goal was **to degrade White identity**, not merely reduce bias.
1158 + - The study was **cited by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)** to justify DEI-aligned policy recommendations.
1159 +{{/expandable}}
1412 1412  
1413 ----
1414 -
1415 -## **Critique and Observations**
1161 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1416 1416  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1417 - - **Innovative approach** by examining the impact of migration on native populations.
1418 - - Uses **both qualitative and quantitative data** for robust analysis.
1163 + - Large sample size and systematic comparison across diverse intervention types.
1164 + - Clearly shows that **implicit preference is resilient** and not easily changed by education or exposure alone.
1419 1419  
1420 1420  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1421 - - Limited to **Western European urban settings**, missing perspectives from other global regions.
1422 - - Does not fully explore **policy interventions for fostering social cohesion**.
1167 + - The most “effective” methods **relied on emotional manipulation, not persuasion or evidence**.
1168 + - Assumes **natural in-group preference is pathological** when expressed by White subjects but makes no effort to test other groups.
1169 + - **Zero attention to pro-Black or anti-White bias** — only White attitudes are pathologized.
1423 1423  
1424 1424  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1425 - - Expand research to **other geographical contexts** to understand migration effects globally.
1426 - - Investigate **long-term trends in urban adaptation and community building**.
1172 + - Test the **psychological harm** and ethical implications of using graphic racial trauma to coerce attitude change.
1173 + - Include interventions that **strengthen ingroup empathy** without demonizing other groups.
1174 + - Disaggregate bias by **class, region, and individual experience**, rather than racially reducing all bias to “Whiteness.”
1175 +{{/expandable}}
1427 1427  
1428 ----
1177 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1178 +- Provides direct evidence that **DEI-style implicit bias training** is based on emotionally abusive and **anti-White psychological framing**.
1179 +- Shows how **social science selectively targets Whites for attitude correction**, often using fictionalized racial trauma scenarios.
1180 +- Demonstrates that even extreme interventions **fail to achieve long-term change**, undermining the scientific justification for such policies.
1181 +{{/expandable}}
1429 1429  
1430 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1431 -- Provides a **new perspective on urban integration**, shifting focus from migrants to native-born populations.
1432 -- Highlights the **role of social and economic power in shaping urban diversity outcomes**.
1433 -- Challenges existing **assimilation theories by showing bidirectional adaptation in diverse cities**.
1183 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1184 +1. Investigate **implicit bias training outcomes** in real-world institutional settings.
1185 +2. Study **the ethical limits of psychological reprogramming** in DEI policies.
1186 +3. Explore **natural ingroup preference across all races** using morally neutral frameworks.
1187 +{{/expandable}}
1434 1434  
1435 ----
1189 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1190 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:lai2014.pdf]]
1191 +{{/expandable}}
1192 +{{/expandable}}
1436 1436  
1437 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1438 -1. Study how **local policies shape attitudes toward urban diversity**.
1439 -2. Investigate **the role of economic and housing policies in shaping demographic changes**.
1440 -3. Explore **how social networks influence perceptions of migration and diversity**.
1441 1441  
1442 ----
1195 +{{expandable summary="Study: Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"}}
1196 +**Source:** *Journal of Diversity in Higher Education*
1197 +**Date of Publication:** *2019*
1198 +**Author(s):** *Kirsten Hextrum*
1199 +**Title:** *"Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"*
1200 +**DOI:** [10.1037/dhe0000140](https://doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000140)
1201 +**Subject Matter:** *Critical Race Theory, Sports Sociology, Anti-White Institutional Framing*
1443 1443  
1444 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1445 -This study examines how **people without migration background experience demographic change in majority-minority cities**. Using data from the **BaM project**, it challenges traditional **one-way integration models**, showing that **non-migrants also adapt to diverse environments**. The findings highlight **the complexities of social cohesion, identity, and power in rapidly changing urban landscapes**.
1446 -
1447 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1448 -
1449 ----
1450 -
1451 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1452 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1080_1369183X.2023.2182548.pdf]]
1453 -
1454 -{{/expand}}
1455 -
1456 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1457 -
1458 -{{expand title="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program" expanded="false"}}
1459 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1460 -**Date of Publication:** *2002*
1461 -**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
1462 -**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
1463 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
1464 -**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
1465 -
1466 ----
1467 -
1468 -## **Key Statistics**
1203 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1469 1469  1. **General Observations:**
1470 - - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
1471 - - Strongest predictors of **successful completion were employment status and race**.
1205 + - Based on **47 athlete interviews**, cherry-picked from non-revenue Division I sports.
1206 + - The study claims **“segregation”**, but presents no evidence of actual exclusion or policy bias — just demographic imbalance.
1472 1472  
1473 1473  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1474 - - Individuals with **stable jobs were more likely to complete the program**.
1475 - - **Black participants had lower success rates**, suggesting potential systemic disparities.
1209 + - Attributes **White participation** in certain sports to "systemic racism", ignoring **self-selection, geography, and cultural affinity**.
1210 + - Claims White athletes are “protected” from race discussions — but never engages with **Black overrepresentation in revenue sports**.
1476 1476  
1477 1477  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1478 - - **Education level was positively correlated** with program completion.
1479 - - Frequency of **drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes**.
1213 + - White athletes are portrayed as **ignorant of their privilege**, a claim drawn entirely from CRT frameworks rather than behavior or outcome.
1214 + - **No empirical data** is offered on policy, scholarship distribution, or team selection criteria.
1215 +{{/expandable}}
1480 1480  
1481 ----
1482 -
1483 -## **Findings**
1217 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1484 1484  1. **Primary Observations:**
1485 - - **Social stability factors** (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
1486 - - **Race and pre-existing substance use patterns** influenced completion rates.
1219 + - Frames **normal demographic patterns** (e.g., majority-White rosters in tennis or rowing) as "institutional whiteness".
1220 + - **Ignores the structural dominance** of Black athletes in high-profile revenue sports like football and basketball.
1487 1487  
1488 1488  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1489 - - White offenders had **higher completion rates** than Black offenders.
1490 - - Drug court success was **higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency**.
1223 + - White athletes are criticized for **lacking racial awareness**, reinforcing the moral framing of **Whiteness as inherently problematic**.
1224 + - **Cultural preference, individual merit, and athletic subculture** are all excluded from consideration.
1491 1491  
1492 1492  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1493 - - **Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program**.
1494 - - Success rates were **significantly higher for participants with case management support**.
1227 + - Argues that college sports **reinforce racial hierarchy** without ever showing how White athletes benefit more than Black athletes.
1228 + - Offers **no comparative analysis** of scholarships, graduation rates, or media portrayal by race.
1229 +{{/expandable}}
1495 1495  
1496 ----
1497 -
1498 -## **Critique and Observations**
1231 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1499 1499  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1500 - - **First empirical study on drug court program success factors**.
1501 - - Uses **longitudinal data** for post-treatment analysis.
1233 + - Useful as a clear example of **how CRT ideologues weaponize demography** to frame White majority spaces as inherently suspect.
1234 + - Shows how **academic literature systematically avoids symmetrical analysis** when outcomes favor White participants.
1502 1502  
1503 1503  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1504 - - Lacks **qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement**.
1505 - - Focuses on **short-term program success** without tracking **long-term relapse rates**.
1237 + - **Excludes revenue sports**, where Black athletes dominate by numbers, prestige, and compensation.
1238 + - **Fails to explain** how team composition emerges from voluntary participation, geography, or subcultural identity.
1239 + - Treats **racial imbalance as proof of racism**, bypassing merit, interest, or socioeconomic context.
1506 1506  
1507 1507  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1508 - - Future research should examine **racial disparities in drug court outcomes**.
1509 - - Study **how community resources impact long-term recovery**.
1242 + - Include **White athlete perspectives** without pre-framing them as racially naive or complicit.
1243 + - **Compare all sports**, including those where Black athletes thrive and lead.
1244 + - Remove CRT framing and **evaluate outcomes empirically**, not ideologically.
1245 +{{/expandable}}
1510 1510  
1511 ----
1247 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1248 +- Demonstrates how **DEI-aligned research reframes benign patterns** as oppressive when White majorities are involved.
1249 +- Illustrates **anti-White academic framing** in environments where no institutional barrier exists.
1250 +- Provides a concrete example of how **CRT avoids acknowledging Black dominance in elite spaces** (revenue athletics).
1251 +{{/expandable}}
1512 1512  
1513 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1514 -- Provides insight into **what factors contribute to drug court program success**.
1515 -- Highlights **racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs**.
1516 -- Supports **policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups**.
1253 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1254 +1. Investigate **racial self-sorting and cultural affiliation** in athletic participation.
1255 +2. Compare **media framing of White-majority vs. Black-majority sports**.
1256 +3. Study **how CRT narratives distort athletic merit and demographic outcomes**.
1257 +{{/expandable}}
1517 1517  
1518 ----
1259 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1260 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1037_dhe0000140.pdf]]
1261 +{{/expandable}}
1262 +{{/expandable}}
1519 1519  
1520 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1521 -1. Investigate **the role of mental health in drug court success rates**.
1522 -2. Assess **long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment**.
1523 -3. Explore **alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts**.
1524 1524  
1525 ----
1265 +{{expandable summary="Study: Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations"}}
1266 +**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1267 +**Date of Publication:** *2016*
1268 +**Author(s):** *Kelly M. Hoffman, Sophie Trawalter, Jordan R. Axt, M. Norman Oliver*
1269 +**Title:** *"Racial Bias in Pain Assessment and Treatment Recommendations, and False Beliefs About Biological Differences Between Blacks and Whites"*
1270 +**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1516047113](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516047113)
1271 +**Subject Matter:** *Medical Ethics, Race in Medicine, Implicit Bias*
1526 1526  
1527 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1528 -This study examines **factors influencing the completion of drug treatment court programs**, identifying **employment, education, and race as key predictors**. The research underscores **systemic disparities in drug court outcomes**, emphasizing the need for **improved support systems for at-risk populations**.
1529 -
1530 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1531 -
1532 ----
1533 -
1534 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1535 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120014424.pdf]]
1536 -
1537 -{{/expand}}
1538 -
1539 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1540 -
1541 -
1542 -{{expand title="Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys" expanded="false"}}
1543 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1544 -**Date of Publication:** *2003*
1545 -**Author(s):** *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
1546 -**Title:** *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
1547 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
1548 -**Subject Matter:** *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research*
1549 -
1550 ----
1551 -
1552 -## **Key Statistics**
1273 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1553 1553  1. **General Observations:**
1554 - - Study examined **how racial and cultural factors influence self-reported substance use data**.
1555 - - Analyzed **36 empirical studies from 1977–2003** on survey reliability across racial/ethnic groups.
1275 + - Analyzed responses from **222 white medical students and residents**.
1276 + - Investigated belief in **false biological differences between Black and White people**.
1277 + - Measured how those beliefs affected **pain ratings and treatment recommendations**.
1556 1556  
1557 1557  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1558 - - Black and Latino respondents **were more likely to underreport drug use** compared to White respondents.
1559 - - **Cultural stigma and distrust in research institutions** affected self-report accuracy.
1280 + - **50% of participants endorsed at least one false belief** (e.g., Black people have thicker skin or less sensitive nerve endings).
1281 + - Those who endorsed false beliefs were **more likely to underestimate Black patients' pain**.
1560 1560  
1561 1561  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1562 - - **Surveys using biological validation (urinalysis, hair tests) revealed underreporting trends**.
1563 - - **Higher recantation rates** (denying past drug use) were observed among minority respondents.
1284 + - Bias was **most prominent among first-year students**, diminishing slightly with experience.
1285 + - Study used **hypothetical case vignettes**, not real patient data.
1286 +{{/expandable}}
1564 1564  
1565 ----
1566 -
1567 -## **Findings**
1288 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1568 1568  1. **Primary Observations:**
1569 - - Racial/ethnic disparities in **substance use reporting bias survey-based research**.
1570 - - **Social desirability and cultural norms impact data reliability**.
1290 + - False biological beliefs were **strongly correlated with racial disparity** in pain assessment.
1291 + - Endorsement of such beliefs led to **less appropriate treatment for Black patients** in fictional cases.
1571 1571  
1572 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1573 - - White respondents were **more likely to overreport** substance use.
1574 - - Black and Latino respondents **had higher recantation rates**, particularly in face-to-face interviews.
1293 +2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1294 + - Medical students with **no false beliefs showed no treatment bias**.
1295 + - No evidence was presented of **active discrimination** — bias appeared linked to **misinformation, not malice**.
1575 1575  
1576 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1577 - - Mode of survey administration **significantly influenced reporting accuracy**.
1578 - - **Self-administered surveys produced more reliable data than interviewer-administered surveys**.
1297 +3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1298 + - Fictional vignettes demonstrated that **misinformation about biology**, not systemic malice, led to unequal care.
1299 + - The study **did not show bias against White patients**, nor explore disparities affecting them.
1300 +{{/expandable}}
1579 1579  
1580 ----
1302 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1303 +1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1304 + - Provides valuable insight into **how medical myths can affect judgment**.
1305 + - Demonstrates the importance of **clinical education and evidence-based practice**.
1581 1581  
1582 -## **Critique and Observations**
1583 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1584 - - **Comprehensive review of 36 studies** on measurement error in substance use reporting.
1585 - - Identifies **systemic biases affecting racial/ethnic survey reliability**.
1307 +2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1308 + - Fails to examine **bias affecting White patients**, including under-treatment of opioid dependence or mental health.
1309 + - Only focuses on one direction of disparity, treating **White patients as a control** rather than a population worthy of study.
1310 + - **Overemphasizes "racial bias"** narrative despite the findings being more about **ignorance than intent**.
1586 1586  
1587 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1588 - - Relies on **secondary data analysis**, limiting direct experimental control.
1589 - - Does not explore **how measurement error impacts policy decisions**.
1312 +3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1313 + - Include **comparison groups for all races**, not just a binary Black–White framework.
1314 + - Investigate **systemic neglect of poor rural White populations**, especially in Appalachia and the Midwest.
1315 + - Clarify the **distinction between false belief and racial animus**, which the study conflates under CRT framing.
1316 +{{/expandable}}
1590 1590  
1591 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1592 - - Future research should **incorporate mixed-method approaches** (qualitative & quantitative).
1593 - - Investigate **how survey design can reduce racial reporting disparities**.
1318 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1319 +- Shows how **DEI-aligned narratives exploit limited findings** to vilify White professionals.
1320 +- Provides an example of a **legitimate medical education issue being repackaged as “racial bias.”**
1321 +- Highlights the **lack of reciprocal scrutiny** of how minorities may receive **preferential narrative framing** or **programmatic support**.
1322 +{{/expandable}}
1594 1594  
1595 ----
1324 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1325 +1. Study whether **DEI training reduces false beliefs** or simply **induces White guilt**.
1326 +2. Investigate **biases against White rural patients**, especially regarding **opioid or pain management stigma**.
1327 +3. Conduct **clinical outcome studies**, not self-reported vignettes, to test **real-world disparities**.
1328 +{{/expandable}}
1596 1596  
1597 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1598 -- Supports research on **racial disparities in self-reported health behaviors**.
1599 -- Highlights **survey methodology issues that impact substance use epidemiology**.
1600 -- Provides insights for **improving data accuracy in public health research**.
1330 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1331 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1073_pnas.1516047113.pdf]]
1332 +{{/expandable}}
1333 +{{/expandable}}
1601 1601  
1602 ----
1603 1603  
1604 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1605 -1. Investigate **how survey design impacts racial disparities in self-reported health data**.
1606 -2. Study **alternative data collection methods (biometric validation, passive data tracking)**.
1607 -3. Explore **the role of social stigma in self-reported health behaviors**.
1336 +{{expandable summary="Study: Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans"}}
1337 +**Source:** *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)*
1338 +**Date of Publication:** *2015*
1339 +**Author(s):** *Anne Case, Angus Deaton*
1340 +**Title:** *"Rising Morbidity and Mortality in Midlife Among White Non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st Century"*
1341 +**DOI:** [10.1073/pnas.1518393112](https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1518393112)
1342 +**Subject Matter:** *Public Health, Mortality, Socioeconomic Factors*
1608 1608  
1609 ----
1610 -
1611 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1612 -This study examines **cross-cultural biases in self-reported substance use surveys**, showing that **racial/ethnic minorities are more likely to underreport drug use** due to **social stigma, research distrust, and survey administration methods**. The findings highlight **critical issues in public health data collection and the need for improved survey design**.
1613 -
1614 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1615 -
1616 ----
1617 -
1618 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1619 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120023394.pdf]]
1620 -
1621 -{{/expand}}
1622 -
1623 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1624 -
1625 -{{expand title="Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys" expanded="false"}}
1626 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1627 -**Date of Publication:** *2003*
1628 -**Author(s):** *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
1629 -**Title:** *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
1630 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
1631 -**Subject Matter:** *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research*
1632 -
1633 ----
1634 -
1635 -## **Key Statistics**
1344 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1636 1636  1. **General Observations:**
1637 - - Study examined **how racial and cultural factors influence self-reported substance use data**.
1638 - - Analyzed **36 empirical studies from 1977–2003** on survey reliability across racial/ethnic groups.
1346 + - Mortality rates among **middle-aged white non-Hispanic Americans (ages 45–54)** increased from 1999 to 2013.
1347 + - This reversal in mortality trends is unique to the U.S.; **no other wealthy country experienced a similar rise**.
1639 1639  
1640 1640  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1641 - - Black and Latino respondents **were more likely to underreport drug use** compared to White respondents.
1642 - - **Cultural stigma and distrust in research institutions** affected self-report accuracy.
1350 + - The increase was **most pronounced among those with a high school education or less**.
1351 + - Hispanic and Black non-Hispanic mortality continued to decline over the same period.
1643 1643  
1644 1644  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1645 - - **Surveys using biological validation (urinalysis, hair tests) revealed underreporting trends**.
1646 - - **Higher recantation rates** (denying past drug use) were observed among minority respondents.
1354 + - Rising mortality was driven primarily by **suicide, drug and alcohol poisoning, and chronic liver disease**.
1355 + - Midlife morbidity increased as well, with more reports of **poor health, pain, and mental distress**.
1356 +{{/expandable}}
1647 1647  
1648 ----
1649 -
1650 -## **Findings**
1358 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1651 1651  1. **Primary Observations:**
1652 - - Racial/ethnic disparities in **substance use reporting bias survey-based research**.
1653 - - **Social desirability and cultural norms impact data reliability**.
1360 + - The rise in mortality is attributed to **substance abuse, economic distress, and deteriorating mental health**.
1361 + - The increase in **suicides and opioid overdoses parallels broader socioeconomic decline**.
1654 1654  
1655 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1656 - - White respondents were **more likely to overreport** substance use.
1657 - - Black and Latino respondents **had higher recantation rates**, particularly in face-to-face interviews.
1363 +2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1364 + - The **largest mortality increases** occurred among **whites without a college degree**.
1365 + - Chronic pain, functional limitations, and self-reported mental distress **rose significantly in affected groups**.
1658 1658  
1659 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1660 - - Mode of survey administration **significantly influenced reporting accuracy**.
1661 - - **Self-administered surveys produced more reliable data than interviewer-administered surveys**.
1367 +3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1368 + - **Educational attainment was a major predictor of mortality trends**, with better-educated individuals experiencing lower mortality rates.
1369 + - Mortality among **white Americans with a college degree continued to decline**, resembling trends in other wealthy nations.
1370 +{{/expandable}}
1662 1662  
1663 ----
1372 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1373 +1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1374 + - **First major study to highlight rising midlife mortality among U.S. whites**.
1375 + - Uses **CDC and Census mortality data spanning over a decade**.
1664 1664  
1665 -## **Critique and Observations**
1666 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1667 - - **Comprehensive review of 36 studies** on measurement error in substance use reporting.
1668 - - Identifies **systemic biases affecting racial/ethnic survey reliability**.
1377 +2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1378 + - Does not establish **causality** between economic decline and increased mortality.
1379 + - Lacks **granular data on opioid prescribing patterns and regional differences**.
1669 1669  
1670 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1671 - - Relies on **secondary data analysis**, limiting direct experimental control.
1672 - - Does not explore **how measurement error impacts policy decisions**.
1381 +3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1382 + - Future studies should explore **how economic shifts, healthcare access, and mental health treatment contribute to these trends**.
1383 + - Further research on **racial and socioeconomic disparities in mortality trends** is needed.
1384 +{{/expandable}}
1673 1673  
1674 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1675 - - Future research should **incorporate mixed-method approaches** (qualitative & quantitative).
1676 - - Investigate **how survey design can reduce racial reporting disparities**.
1386 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1387 +- Highlights **socioeconomic and racial disparities** in health outcomes.
1388 +- Supports research on **substance abuse and mental health crises in the U.S.**.
1389 +- Provides evidence for **the role of economic instability in public health trends**.
1390 +{{/expandable}}
1677 1677  
1678 ----
1392 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1393 +1. Investigate **regional differences in rising midlife mortality**.
1394 +2. Examine the **impact of the opioid crisis on long-term health trends**.
1395 +3. Study **policy interventions aimed at reversing rising mortality rates**.
1396 +{{/expandable}}
1679 1679  
1680 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1681 -- Supports research on **racial disparities in self-reported health behaviors**.
1682 -- Highlights **survey methodology issues that impact substance use epidemiology**.
1683 -- Provides insights for **improving data accuracy in public health research**.
1398 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1399 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1073_pnas.1518393112.pdf]]
1400 +{{/expandable}}
1401 +{{/expandable}}
1684 1684  
1685 ----
1403 +{{expandable summary="Study: How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"}}
1404 +**Source:** *Urban Studies*
1405 +**Date of Publication:** *2023*
1406 +**Author(s):** *Nina Glick Schiller, Jens Schneider, Ayşe Çağlar*
1407 +**Title:** *"How Do People Without Migration Background Experience and Impact Today’s Superdiverse Cities?"*
1408 +**DOI:** [10.1177/00420980231170057](https://doi.org/10.1177/00420980231170057)
1409 +**Subject Matter:** *Urban Diversity, Migration, Identity Politics*
1686 1686  
1687 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1688 -1. Investigate **how survey design impacts racial disparities in self-reported health data**.
1689 -2. Study **alternative data collection methods (biometric validation, passive data tracking)**.
1690 -3. Explore **the role of social stigma in self-reported health behaviors**.
1691 -
1692 ----
1693 -
1694 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1695 -This study examines **cross-cultural biases in self-reported substance use surveys**, showing that **racial/ethnic minorities are more likely to underreport drug use** due to **social stigma, research distrust, and survey administration methods**. The findings highlight **critical issues in public health data collection and the need for improved survey design**.
1696 -
1697 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1698 -
1699 ----
1700 -
1701 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1702 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120023394.pdf]]
1703 -
1704 -{{/expand}}
1705 -
1706 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1707 -
1708 -{{expand title="Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program" expanded="false"}}
1709 -**Source:** *Substance Use & Misuse*
1710 -**Date of Publication:** *2002*
1711 -**Author(s):** *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
1712 -**Title:** *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
1713 -**DOI:** [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
1714 -**Subject Matter:** *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*
1715 -
1716 ----
1717 -
1718 -## **Key Statistics**
1411 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1719 1719  1. **General Observations:**
1720 - - Study examined **drug treatment court success rates** among first-time offenders.
1721 - - Strongest predictors of **successful completion were employment status and race**.
1413 + - Based on interviews with **White European residents** in three major European cities.
1414 + - Focused on how **"non-migrants" (code for native Whites)** perceive and adapt to so-called “superdiversity”.
1722 1722  
1723 1723  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1724 - - Individuals with **stable jobs were more likely to complete the program**.
1725 - - **Black participants had lower success rates**, suggesting potential systemic disparities.
1417 + - Interviewees were **overwhelmingly framed as obstacles** to multicultural harmony.
1418 + - Researchers **pathologized attachment to local culture or ethnic identity** as “resistance to change.
1726 1726  
1727 1727  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1728 - - **Education level was positively correlated** with program completion.
1729 - - Frequency of **drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes**.
1421 + - Claims that even positive civic participation by Whites may **“reinforce white privilege.”**
1422 + - Provides **no quantitative data** on actual neighborhood changes or crime statistics.
1423 +{{/expandable}}
1730 1730  
1731 ----
1732 -
1733 -## **Findings**
1425 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1734 1734  1. **Primary Observations:**
1735 - - **Social stability factors** (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
1736 - - **Race and pre-existing substance use patterns** influenced completion rates.
1427 + - Argues that White natives, by simply existing and having a historical presence, **“shape urban inequality.”**
1428 + - Positions White cultural norms as inherently oppressive or exclusionary.
1737 1737  
1738 1738  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1739 - - White offenders had **higher completion rates** than Black offenders.
1740 - - Drug court success was **higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency**.
1431 + - Critiques White residents for seeking **cultural familiarity or demographic continuity.**
1432 + - Presents **White neighborhood cohesion** as a form of “invisible boundary-making.
1741 1741  
1742 1742  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1743 - - **Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program**.
1744 - - Success rates were **significantly higher for participants with case management support**.
1435 + - Interviews frame **normal concerns about safety, schooling, or housing** as coded “racism.”
1436 + - Treats **multicultural disruption** as inherently positive, and **resistance as bigotry.**
1437 +{{/expandable}}
1745 1745  
1746 ----
1747 -
1748 -## **Critique and Observations**
1439 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1749 1749  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1750 - - **First empirical study on drug court program success factors**.
1751 - - Uses **longitudinal data** for post-treatment analysis.
1441 + - Reveals how **social scientists increasingly treat Whiteness itself as a problem.**
1442 + - Offers an **unintentional case study in academic anti-White framing.**
1752 1752  
1753 1753  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1754 - - Lacks **qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement**.
1755 - - Focuses on **short-term program success** without tracking **long-term relapse rates**.
1445 + - **Completely ignores migrant-driven displacement** of working-class Whites.
1446 + - Makes **no attempt to understand White residents sympathetically**, only as barriers.
1447 + - Lacks analysis of **economic factors, crime, housing scarcity, or policy failures** contributing to discontent.
1756 1756  
1757 1757  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1758 - - Future research should examine **racial disparities in drug court outcomes**.
1759 - - Study **how community resources impact long-term recovery**.
1450 + - Include **White perspectives without presuming guilt or fragility.**
1451 + - Disaggregate “White” by **class, locality, or experience** — not treat as a monolith.
1452 + - Balance cultural analysis with **hard demographic and economic data.**
1453 +{{/expandable}}
1760 1760  
1761 ----
1455 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1456 +- Demonstrates how **academic literature increasingly stigmatizes White presence** in urban life.
1457 +- Shows how **“diversity” is defined as the absence or silence of native populations.**
1458 +- Useful for exposing how **CRT and superdiversity discourse erase White communities' legitimacy.**
1459 +{{/expandable}}
1762 1762  
1763 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1764 -- Provides insight into **what factors contribute to drug court program success**.
1765 -- Highlights **racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs**.
1766 -- Supports **policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups**.
1461 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1462 +1. Study the **psychological impact of demographic displacement** on native European populations.
1463 +2. Examine **rising crime and social fragmentation** in “superdiverse” zones.
1464 +3. Analyze how **housing, schooling, and local economies** are impacted by mass migration.
1465 +{{/expandable}}
1767 1767  
1768 ----
1467 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1468 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1177_00420980231170057.pdf]]
1469 +{{/expandable}}
1470 +{{/expandable}}
1769 1769  
1770 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1771 -1. Investigate **the role of mental health in drug court success rates**.
1772 -2. Assess **long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment**.
1773 -3. Explore **alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts**.
1774 1774  
1775 ----
1473 += Media =
1776 1776  
1777 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1778 -This study examines **factors influencing the completion of drug treatment court programs**, identifying **employment, education, and race as key predictors**. The research underscores **systemic disparities in drug court outcomes**, emphasizing the need for **improved support systems for at-risk populations**.
1475 +{{expandable summary="Study: The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflic"}}
1476 +**Source:** *Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication*
1477 +**Date of Publication:** *2021*
1478 +**Author(s):** *Zeynep Tufekci, Jesse Fox, Andrew Chadwick*
1479 +**Title:** *"The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflict"*
1480 +**DOI:** [10.1093/jcmc/zmab003](https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmab003)
1481 +**Subject Matter:** *Online Communication, Social Media, Conflict Studies*
1779 1779  
1780 -This summary provides an accessible, at-a-glance overview of the study’s contributions. Please refer to the full paper for in-depth analysis.
1781 -
1782 ----
1783 -
1784 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1785 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1081_JA-120014424.pdf]]
1786 -
1787 -{{/expand}}
1788 -
1789 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1790 -
1791 -{{expand title="Study: The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflict" expanded="false"}}
1792 -**Source:** *Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication*
1793 -**Date of Publication:** *2021*
1794 -**Author(s):** *Zeynep Tufekci, Jesse Fox, Andrew Chadwick*
1795 -**Title:** *"The Role of Computer-Mediated Communication in Intergroup Conflict"*
1796 -**DOI:** [10.1093/jcmc/zmab003](https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmab003)
1797 -**Subject Matter:** *Online Communication, Social Media, Conflict Studies*
1798 -
1799 ----
1800 -
1801 -## **Key Statistics**
1483 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1802 1802  1. **General Observations:**
1803 1803   - Analyzed **over 500,000 social media interactions** related to intergroup conflict.
1804 1804   - Found that **computer-mediated communication (CMC) intensifies polarization**.
... ... @@ -1810,10 +1810,9 @@
1810 1810  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1811 1811   - **Misinformation spread 3x faster** in polarized online discussions.
1812 1812   - Users exposed to **conflicting viewpoints were more likely to engage in retaliatory discourse**.
1495 +{{/expandable}}
1813 1813  
1814 ----
1815 -
1816 -## **Findings**
1497 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1817 1817  1. **Primary Observations:**
1818 1818   - **Online interactions amplify intergroup conflict** due to selective exposure and confirmation bias.
1819 1819   - **Algorithmic sorting contributes to ideological segmentation**.
... ... @@ -1825,10 +1825,9 @@
1825 1825  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1826 1826   - **CMC increased political tribalism** in digital spaces.
1827 1827   - **Emotional language spread more widely** than factual content.
1509 +{{/expandable}}
1828 1828  
1829 ----
1830 -
1831 -## **Critique and Observations**
1511 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1832 1832  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1833 1833   - **Largest dataset** to date analyzing **CMC and intergroup conflict**.
1834 1834   - Uses **longitudinal data tracking user behavior over time**.
... ... @@ -1840,47 +1840,101 @@
1840 1840  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1841 1841   - Future studies should **analyze private messaging platforms** in conflict dynamics.
1842 1842   - Investigate **interventions that reduce online polarization**.
1523 +{{/expandable}}
1843 1843  
1844 ----
1845 -
1846 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1525 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1847 1847  - Explores how **digital communication influences social division**.
1848 1848  - Supports research on **social media regulation and conflict mitigation**.
1849 1849  - Provides **data on misinformation and online radicalization trends**.
1529 +{{/expandable}}
1850 1850  
1851 ----
1852 -
1853 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1531 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1854 1854  1. Investigate **how online anonymity affects real-world aggression**.
1855 1855  2. Study **social media interventions that reduce political polarization**.
1856 1856  3. Explore **cross-cultural differences in CMC and intergroup hostility**.
1535 +{{/expandable}}
1857 1857  
1858 ----
1537 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1538 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1093_jcmc_zmab003.pdf]]
1539 +{{/expandable}}
1540 +{{/expandable}}
1859 1859  
1860 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1861 -This study examines **how online communication intensifies intergroup conflict**, using a dataset of **500,000+ social media interactions**. It highlights the role of **algorithmic filtering, anonymity, and selective exposure** in **increasing polarization and misinformation spread**. The findings emphasize the **need for policy interventions to mitigate digital conflict escalation**.
1542 +{{expandable summary="Study: Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing on Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"}}
1543 +**Source:** *Politics & Policy*
1544 +**Date of Publication:** *2007*
1545 +**Author(s):** *Tyler Johnson*
1546 +**Title:** *"Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing: Explaining Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"*
1547 +**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x)
1548 +**Subject Matter:** *LGBTQ+ Rights, Public Opinion, Media Influence*
1862 1862  
1863 ----
1550 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1551 +1. **General Observations:**
1552 + - Examines **media coverage of same-sex marriage and civil unions from 2004 to 2011**.
1553 + - Analyzes how **media framing influences public opinion trends** on LGBTQ+ rights.
1864 1864  
1865 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1866 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1093_jcmc_zmab003.pdf]]
1555 +2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1556 + - **Equality-based framing decreases opposition** to same-sex marriage.
1557 + - **Morality-based framing increases opposition** to same-sex marriage.
1867 1867  
1868 -{{/expand}}
1559 +3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1560 + - When **equality framing surpasses morality framing**, public opposition declines.
1561 + - Media framing **directly affects public attitudes** over time, shaping policy debates.
1562 +{{/expandable}}
1869 1869  
1870 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1564 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1565 +1. **Primary Observations:**
1566 + - **Media framing plays a critical role in shaping attitudes** toward LGBTQ+ rights.
1567 + - **Equality-focused narratives** lead to greater public support for same-sex marriage.
1871 1871  
1569 +2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1570 + - **Religious and conservative audiences** respond more to morality-based framing.
1571 + - **Younger and progressive audiences** respond more to equality-based framing.
1872 1872  
1873 -{{expand title="Study: The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion" expanded="false"}}
1874 -**Source:** *Journal of Communication*
1875 -**Date of Publication:** *2019*
1876 -**Author(s):** *Natalie Stroud, Matthew Barnidge, Shannon McGregor*
1877 -**Title:** *"The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion: Evidence from Experimental Studies"*
1878 -**DOI:** [10.1093/joc/jqx021](https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqx021)
1879 -**Subject Matter:** *Media Influence, Political Communication, Persuasion*
1573 +3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1574 + - **Periods of increased equality framing** saw measurable **declines in opposition to LGBTQ+ rights**.
1575 + - **Major political events (elections, Supreme Court cases) influenced framing trends**.
1576 +{{/expandable}}
1880 1880  
1881 ----
1578 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1579 +1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1580 + - **Longitudinal dataset spanning multiple election cycles**.
1581 + - Provides **quantitative analysis of how media framing shifts public opinion**.
1882 1882  
1883 -## **Key Statistics**
1583 +2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1584 + - Focuses **only on U.S. media coverage**, limiting global applicability.
1585 + - Does not account for **social media's growing influence** on public opinion.
1586 +
1587 +3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1588 + - Expand the study to **global perspectives on LGBTQ+ rights and media influence**.
1589 + - Investigate how **different media platforms (TV vs. digital media) impact opinion shifts**.
1590 +{{/expandable}}
1591 +
1592 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1593 +- Explores **how media narratives shape policy support and public sentiment**.
1594 +- Highlights **the strategic importance of framing in LGBTQ+ advocacy**.
1595 +- Reinforces the need for **media literacy in understanding policy debates**.
1596 +{{/expandable}}
1597 +
1598 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1599 +1. Examine how **social media affects framing of LGBTQ+ issues**.
1600 +2. Study **differences in framing across political media outlets**.
1601 +3. Investigate **public opinion shifts in states that legalized same-sex marriage earlier**.
1602 +{{/expandable}}
1603 +
1604 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1605 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1111_j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x_abstract.pdf]]
1606 +{{/expandable}}
1607 +{{/expandable}}
1608 +
1609 +{{expandable summary="Study: The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion"}}
1610 +**Source:** *Journal of Communication*
1611 +**Date of Publication:** *2019*
1612 +**Author(s):** *Natalie Stroud, Matthew Barnidge, Shannon McGregor*
1613 +**Title:** *"The Effects of Digital Media on Political Persuasion: Evidence from Experimental Studies"*
1614 +**DOI:** [10.1093/joc/jqx021](https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqx021)
1615 +**Subject Matter:** *Media Influence, Political Communication, Persuasion*
1616 +
1617 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1884 1884  1. **General Observations:**
1885 1885   - Conducted **12 experimental studies** on **digital media's impact on political beliefs**.
1886 1886   - **58% of participants** showed shifts in political opinion based on online content.
... ... @@ -1892,10 +1892,9 @@
1892 1892  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1893 1893   - **Interactive media (comment sections, polls) increased political engagement**.
1894 1894   - **Exposure to counterarguments reduced partisan bias** by **14% on average**.
1629 +{{/expandable}}
1895 1895  
1896 ----
1897 -
1898 -## **Findings**
1631 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1899 1899  1. **Primary Observations:**
1900 1900   - **Digital media significantly influences political opinions**, with younger audiences being the most impacted.
1901 1901   - **Multimedia content is more persuasive** than traditional text-based arguments.
... ... @@ -1907,10 +1907,9 @@
1907 1907  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1908 1908   - **Highly partisan users became more entrenched in their views**, even when exposed to opposing content.
1909 1909   - **Neutral or apolitical users were more likely to shift opinions**.
1643 +{{/expandable}}
1910 1910  
1911 ----
1912 -
1913 -## **Critique and Observations**
1645 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1914 1914  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1915 1915   - **Large-scale experimental design** allows for controlled comparisons.
1916 1916   - Covers **multiple digital platforms**, ensuring robust findings.
... ... @@ -1922,278 +1922,189 @@
1922 1922  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1923 1923   - Future studies should track **long-term opinion changes** beyond immediate reactions.
1924 1924   - Investigate **the role of digital media literacy in resisting persuasion**.
1657 +{{/expandable}}
1925 1925  
1926 ----
1927 -
1928 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
1659 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1929 1929  - Provides insights into **how digital media shapes political discourse**.
1930 1930  - Highlights **which platforms and content types are most influential**.
1931 1931  - Supports **research on misinformation and online political engagement**.
1663 +{{/expandable}}
1932 1932  
1933 ----
1934 -
1935 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
1665 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1936 1936  1. Study how **fact-checking influences digital persuasion effects**.
1937 1937  2. Investigate the **role of political influencers in shaping opinions**.
1938 1938  3. Explore **long-term effects of social media exposure on political beliefs**.
1669 +{{/expandable}}
1939 1939  
1940 ----
1941 -
1942 -## **Summary of Research Study**
1943 -This study analyzes **how digital media influences political persuasion**, using **12 experimental studies**. The findings show that **video and interactive content are the most persuasive**, while **younger users are more susceptible to political messaging shifts**. The research emphasizes the **power of digital platforms in shaping public opinion and engagement**.
1944 -
1945 ----
1946 -
1947 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
1671 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1948 1948  [[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1093_joc_jqx021.pdf]]
1673 +{{/expandable}}
1674 +{{/expandable}}
1949 1949  
1950 -{{/expand}}
1676 +{{expandable summary="Study: White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years"}}
1677 +Source: Journal of Advertising Research
1678 +Date of Publication: 2022
1679 +Author(s): Peter M. Lenk, Eric T. Bradlow, Randolph E. Bucklin, Sungeun (Clara) Kim
1680 +Title: "White Americans’ Preference for Black People in Advertising Has Increased in the Past 66 Years: A Meta-Analysis"
1681 +DOI: 10.2501/JAR-2022-028
1682 +Subject Matter: Advertising Trends, Racial Representation, Cultural Shifts
1951 1951  
1952 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1684 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1953 1953  
1954 -{{expand title="Study: Pervasive Findings of Directional Selection in Ancient DNA" expanded="false"}}
1955 -**Source:** *bioRxiv Preprint*
1956 -**Date of Publication:** *September 15, 2024*
1957 -**Author(s):** *Ali Akbari, Alison R. Barton, Steven Gazal, Zheng Li, Mohammadreza Kariminejad, et al.*
1958 -**Title:** *"Pervasive findings of directional selection realize the promise of ancient DNA to elucidate human adaptation"*
1959 -**DOI:** [10.1101/2024.09.14.613021](https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.14.613021)
1960 -**Subject Matter:** *Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Natural Selection*
1686 +**General Observations:**
1961 1961  
1962 ----
1688 +Meta-analysis of 74 studies conducted between 1955 and 2020 on racial representation in advertising.
1963 1963  
1964 -## **Key Statistics**
1965 -1. **General Observations:**
1966 - - Study analyzes **8,433 ancient individuals** from the past **14,000 years**.
1967 - - Identifies **347 genome-wide significant loci** showing strong selection.
1690 +Sample included mostly White U.S. participants, with consistent tracking of their preferences.
1968 1968  
1969 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1970 - - Examines **West Eurasian populations** and their genetic evolution.
1971 - - Tracks **changes in allele frequencies over millennia**.
1692 +**Subgroup Analysis:**
1972 1972  
1973 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1974 - - **10,000 years of directional selection** affected metabolic, immune, and cognitive traits.
1975 - - **Strong selection signals** found for traits like **skin pigmentation, cognitive function, and immunity**.
1694 +Found a steady increase in positive responses toward Black models/actors in ads by White viewers.
1976 1976  
1977 ----
1696 +Recent decades show equal or greater preference for Black faces compared to White ones.
1978 1978  
1979 -## **Findings**
1980 -1. **Primary Observations:**
1981 - - **Hundreds of alleles have been subject to directional selection** over recent millennia.
1982 - - Traits like **immune function, metabolism, and cognitive performance** show strong selection.
1698 +**Other Significant Data Points:**
1983 1983  
1984 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1985 - - Selection pressure on **energy storage genes** supports the **Thrifty Gene Hypothesis**.
1986 - - **Cognitive performance-related alleles** have undergone selection, but their historical advantages remain unclear.
1700 +Study frames this shift as a positive move toward diversity, ignoring implications for displaced White cultural representation.
1987 1987  
1988 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1989 - - **Celiac disease risk allele** increased from **0% to 20%** in 4,000 years.
1990 - - **Blood type B frequency rose from 0% to 8% in 6,000 years**.
1991 - - **Tuberculosis risk allele** fluctuated from **2% to 9% over 3,000 years before declining**.
1702 +No equivalent data was collected on Black or Hispanic attitudes toward White representation.
1703 +{{/expandable}}
1992 1992  
1993 ----
1705 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1994 1994  
1995 -## **Critique and Observations**
1996 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1997 - - **Largest dataset to date** on natural selection in human ancient DNA.
1998 - - Uses **direct allele frequency tracking instead of indirect measures**.
1707 +**Primary Observations:**
1999 1999  
2000 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
2001 - - Findings **may not translate directly** to modern populations.
2002 - - **Unclear whether observed selection pressures persist today**.
1709 +White Americans have become increasingly receptive or favorable toward Black figures in advertising, even over timeframes of widespread cultural change.
2003 2003  
2004 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
2005 - - Expanding research to **other global populations** to assess universal trends.
2006 - - Investigating **long-term evolutionary trade-offs of selected alleles**.
1711 +These preferences held across product types, media formats, and ad genres.
2007 2007  
2008 ----
1713 +**Subgroup Trends:**
2009 2009  
2010 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
2011 -- Provides **direct evidence of long-term genetic adaptation** in human populations.
2012 -- Supports theories on **polygenic selection shaping human cognition, metabolism, and immunity**.
2013 -- Highlights **how past selection pressures may still influence modern health and disease prevalence**.
1715 +Studies from the 1960s–1980s showed preference for in-group racial representation, which has dropped sharply for Whites in recent decades.
2014 2014  
2015 ----
1717 +The largest positive attitudinal shift occurred between 1995–2020, coinciding with major DEI and cultural programming trends.
2016 2016  
2017 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
2018 -1. Examine **selection patterns in non-European populations** for comparison.
2019 -2. Investigate **how environmental and cultural shifts influenced genetic selection**.
2020 -3. Explore **the genetic basis of traits linked to past and present-day human survival**.
1719 +**Specific Case Analysis:**
2021 2021  
2022 ----
1721 +The authors position this as “progress,” but offer no critical reflection on the effects of displacing White imagery from national advertising narratives.
2023 2023  
2024 -## **Summary of Research Study**
2025 -This study examines **how human genetic adaptation has unfolded over 14,000 years**, using a **large dataset of ancient DNA**. It highlights **strong selection on immune function, metabolism, and cognitive traits**, revealing **hundreds of loci affected by directional selection**. The findings emphasize **the power of ancient DNA in tracking human evolution and adaptation**.
1723 +Completely omits consumer preference studies in countries outside the U.S., especially in more homogeneous nations.
1724 +{{/expandable}}
2026 2026  
2027 ----
1726 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
2028 2028  
2029 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
2030 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1101_2024.09.14.613021doi_.pdf]]
1728 +**Strengths of the Study:**
2031 2031  
2032 -{{/expand}}
1730 +Large-scale dataset across decades provides a clear empirical view of long-term trends.
2033 2033  
2034 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
1732 +Useful as a benchmark of how White American preferences have evolved under sociocultural pressure.
2035 2035  
2036 -{{expand title="Study: Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes – A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" expanded="false"}}
2037 -**Source:** *Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica*
2038 -**Date of Publication:** *2012*
2039 -**Author(s):** *Ravisha M. Srinivasjois, Shreya Shah, Prakesh S. Shah, Knowledge Synthesis Group on Determinants of Preterm/LBW Births*
2040 -**Title:** *"Biracial Couples and Adverse Birth Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis"*
2041 -**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0412.2012.01501.x)
2042 -**Subject Matter:** *Neonatal Health, Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Racial Disparities*
1734 +**Limitations of the Study:**
2043 2043  
2044 ----
1736 +Fails to ask whether increasing diversity is consumer-driven or culturally imposed.
2045 2045  
2046 -## **Key Statistics**
2047 -1. **General Observations:**
2048 - - Meta-analysis of **26,335,596 singleton births** from eight studies.
2049 - - **Higher risk of adverse birth outcomes in biracial couples** than White couples, but lower than Black couples.
1738 +Ignores the potential alienation or displacement of White cultural identity from mainstream advertising.
2050 2050  
2051 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
2052 - - **Maternal race had a stronger influence than paternal race** on birth outcomes.
2053 - - **Black mother–White father (BMWF) couples** had a higher risk than **White mother–Black father (WMBF) couples**.
1740 +Assumes “diverse equals better” without testing economic or emotional impact of those shifts.
2054 2054  
2055 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
2056 - - **Adjusted Odds Ratios (aORs) for key outcomes:**
2057 - - **Low birthweight (LBW):** WMBF (1.21), BMWF (1.75), Black mother–Black father (BMBF) (2.08).
2058 - - **Preterm births (PTB):** WMBF (1.17), BMWF (1.37), BMBF (1.78).
2059 - - **Stillbirths:** WMBF (1.43), BMWF (1.51), BMBF (1.85).
1742 +**Suggestions for Improvement:**
2060 2060  
2061 ----
1744 +Include non-White viewer reactions to all-White or traditional American imagery for balance.
2062 2062  
2063 -## **Findings**
2064 -1. **Primary Observations:**
2065 - - **Biracial couples face a gradient of risk**: higher than White couples but lower than Black couples.
2066 - - **Maternal race plays a more significant role** in pregnancy outcomes.
1746 +Test whether consumers notice racial proportions or experience fatigue from overcorrection.
2067 2067  
2068 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
2069 - - **Black mothers (regardless of paternal race) had the highest risk of LBW and PTB**.
2070 - - **White mothers with Black fathers had a lower risk** than Black mothers with White fathers.
1748 +Explore regional or class-based variance among White viewers, not just aggregate averages.
1749 +{{/expandable}}
2071 2071  
2072 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
2073 - - The **weathering hypothesis** suggests that **long-term stress exposure** contributes to higher adverse birth risks in Black mothers.
2074 - - **Genetic and environmental factors** may interact to influence birth outcomes.
1751 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
2075 2075  
2076 ----
1753 +Demonstrates how White cultural imagery has been steadily replaced or downplayed in the public sphere.
2077 2077  
2078 -## **Critique and Observations**
2079 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
2080 - - **Largest meta-analysis** on racial disparities in birth outcomes.
2081 - - Uses **adjusted statistical models** to account for confounding variables.
1755 +Useful for showing how marketing professionals and researchers frame White displacement as “progress.”
2082 2082  
2083 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
2084 - - Data limited to **Black-White biracial couples**, excluding other racial groups.
2085 - - **Socioeconomic and healthcare access factors** not fully explored.
1757 +Empirically supports the decline of White in-group preference — possibly due to reeducation, guilt framing, or media saturation.
1758 +{{/expandable}}
2086 2086  
2087 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
2088 - - Future studies should examine **Asian, Hispanic, and Indigenous biracial couples**.
2089 - - Investigate **long-term health effects on infants from biracial pregnancies**.
1760 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
2090 2090  
2091 ----
1762 +Study how overrepresentation of minorities in advertising compares to actual demographics.
2092 2092  
2093 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
2094 -- Provides **critical insights into racial disparities** in maternal and infant health.
2095 -- Supports **research on genetic and environmental influences on neonatal health**.
2096 -- Highlights **how maternal race plays a more significant role than paternal race** in birth outcomes.
1764 +Examine whether consumers feel represented or alienated by identity-based marketing.
2097 2097  
2098 ----
1766 +Investigate the psychological and cultural impact of long-term demographic displacement in national advertising.
1767 +{{/expandable}}
2099 2099  
2100 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
2101 -1. Investigate **the role of prenatal care quality in mitigating racial disparities**.
2102 -2. Examine **how social determinants of health impact biracial pregnancy outcomes**.
2103 -3. Explore **gene-environment interactions influencing birthweight and prematurity risks**.
1769 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1770 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.2501_JAR-2022-028.pdf]]
1771 +{{/expandable}}
1772 +{{/expandable}}
2104 2104  
2105 ----
1774 +{{expandable summary="Study: Meta-Analysis on Mediated Contact and Prejudice"}}
1775 +**Source:** *Journal of Communication*
1776 +**Date of Publication:** *2020*
1777 +**Author(s):** *John A. Banas, Lauren L. Miller, David A. Braddock, Sun Kyong Lee*
1778 +**Title:** *"Meta-Analysis on Mediated Contact and Prejudice"*
1779 +**DOI:** [10.1093/joc/jqz032](https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqz032)
1780 +**Subject Matter:** *Media Psychology, Prejudice Reduction, Intergroup Relations*
2106 2106  
2107 -## **Summary of Research Study**
2108 -This meta-analysis examines **the impact of biracial parentage on birth outcomes**, showing that **biracial couples face a higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes than White couples but lower than Black couples**. The findings emphasize **maternal race as a key factor in birth risks**, with **Black mothers having the highest rates of preterm birth and low birthweight, regardless of paternal race**.
2109 -
2110 ----
2111 -
2112 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
2113 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1111_j.1600-0412.2012.01501.xAbstract.pdf]]
2114 -
2115 -{{/expand}}
2116 -
2117 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
2118 -
2119 -{{expand title="Study: Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing on Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions" expanded="false"}}
2120 -**Source:** *Politics & Policy*
2121 -**Date of Publication:** *2007*
2122 -**Author(s):** *Tyler Johnson*
2123 -**Title:** *"Equality, Morality, and the Impact of Media Framing: Explaining Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions"*
2124 -**DOI:** [10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x](https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x)
2125 -**Subject Matter:** *LGBTQ+ Rights, Public Opinion, Media Influence*
2126 -
2127 ----
2128 -
2129 -## **Key Statistics**
1782 +{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
2130 2130  1. **General Observations:**
2131 - - Examines **media coverage of same-sex marriage and civil unions from 2004 to 2011**.
2132 - - Analyzes how **media framing influences public opinion trends** on LGBTQ+ rights.
1784 + - Aggregated **71 studies involving 27,000+ participants**.
1785 + - Focused on how **media portrayals of out-groups (primarily minorities)** affect attitudes among dominant in-groups (i.e., Whites).
2133 2133  
2134 2134  2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
2135 - - **Equality-based framing decreases opposition** to same-sex marriage.
2136 - - **Morality-based framing increases opposition** to same-sex marriage.
1788 + - **Fictional entertainment** had stronger effects than news.
1789 + - **Positive portrayals of minorities** correlated with significant reductions in “prejudice.
2137 2137  
2138 2138  3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
2139 - - When **equality framing surpasses morality framing**, public opposition declines.
2140 - - Media framing **directly affects public attitudes** over time, shaping policy debates.
1792 + - Effects were stronger when minority characters were portrayed as **warm, competent, and morally relatable**.
1793 + - Contact was more effective when it mimicked **face-to-face friendship narratives**.
1794 +{{/expandable}}
2141 2141  
2142 ----
2143 -
2144 -## **Findings**
1796 +{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
2145 2145  1. **Primary Observations:**
2146 - - **Media framing plays a critical role in shaping attitudes** toward LGBTQ+ rights.
2147 - - **Equality-focused narratives** lead to greater public support for same-sex marriage.
1798 + - Media is a **powerful tool for shaping racial attitudes**, capable of reducing “prejudice” without real-world contact.
1799 + - **Repeated exposure** to positive portrayals of minorities led to increased acceptance and reduced negative bias.
2148 2148  
2149 2149  2. **Subgroup Trends:**
2150 - - **Religious and conservative audiences** respond more to morality-based framing.
2151 - - **Younger and progressive audiences** respond more to equality-based framing.
1802 + - **White participants** were the primary targets of reconditioning.
1803 + - Minority participants were not studied in terms of **prejudice against Whites**.
2152 2152  
2153 2153  3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
2154 - - **Periods of increased equality framing** saw measurable **declines in opposition to LGBTQ+ rights**.
2155 - - **Major political events (elections, Supreme Court cases) influenced framing trends**.
1806 + - “Parasocial” relationships with minority characters (TV/movie exposure) had comparable psychological effects to actual friendships.
1807 + - Media framing functioned as a **top-down mechanism for social engineering**, not just passive reflection of society.
1808 +{{/expandable}}
2156 2156  
2157 ----
2158 -
2159 -## **Critique and Observations**
1810 +{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
2160 2160  1. **Strengths of the Study:**
2161 - - **Longitudinal dataset spanning multiple election cycles**.
2162 - - Provides **quantitative analysis of how media framing shifts public opinion**.
1812 + - High-quality quantitative meta-analysis with clear design and robust statistical handling.
1813 + - Acknowledges **media’s ability to alter long-held social beliefs** without physical contact.
2163 2163  
2164 2164  2. **Limitations of the Study:**
2165 - - Focuses **only on U.S. media coverage**, limiting global applicability.
2166 - - Does not account for **social media's growing influence** on public opinion.
1816 + - Only defines “prejudice” as **negative attitudes from Whites toward minorities** — no exploration of anti-White media narratives or bias.
1817 + - Ignores the effects of **overexposure to minority portrayals** on cultural alienation or backlash.
1818 + - Assumes **assimilation into DEI norms is inherently positive**, and any reluctance to accept them is “prejudice”.
2167 2167  
2168 2168  3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
2169 - - Expand the study to **global perspectives on LGBTQ+ rights and media influence**.
2170 - - Investigate how **different media platforms (TV vs. digital media) impact opinion shifts**.
1821 + - Study reciprocal dynamics — how **minority media portrayals impact attitudes toward Whites**.
1822 + - Investigate whether constant valorization of minorities leads to **resentment, guilt, or political disengagement** among White viewers.
1823 + - Analyze **media saturation effects**, especially in multicultural propaganda and corporate DEI messaging.
1824 +{{/expandable}}
2171 2171  
2172 ----
1826 +{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1827 +- Provides **direct evidence** that media is being used to **reshape racial attitudes** through emotional, parasocial contact.
1828 +- Reinforces concern that **“tolerance” is engineered via asymmetric emotional exposure**, not organic consensus.
1829 +- Useful for documenting how **Whiteness is often treated as a bias to be corrected**, not a culture to be respected.
1830 +{{/expandable}}
2173 2173  
2174 -## **Relevance to Subproject**
2175 -- Explores **how media narratives shape policy support and public sentiment**.
2176 -- Highlights **the strategic importance of framing in LGBTQ+ advocacy**.
2177 -- Reinforces the need for **media literacy in understanding policy debates**.
1832 +{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1833 +1. Investigate **reverse parasocial effects** — how negative portrayals of White men affect self-perception and mental health.
1834 +2. Study how **mass entertainment normalizes demographic shifts** and silences native concerns.
1835 +3. Compare effects of **Western vs. non-Western media systems** in promoting diversity narratives.
1836 +{{/expandable}}
2178 2178  
2179 ----
1838 +{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1839 +[[Download Full Study>>attach:Banas et al. - 2020 - Meta-Analysis on Mediated Contact and Prejudice.pdf]]
1840 +{{/expandable}}
1841 +{{/expandable}}
2180 2180  
2181 -## **Suggestions for Further Exploration**
2182 -1. Examine how **social media affects framing of LGBTQ+ issues**.
2183 -2. Study **differences in framing across political media outlets**.
2184 -3. Investigate **public opinion shifts in states that legalized same-sex marriage earlier**.
2185 -
2186 ----
2187 -
2188 -## **Summary of Research Study**
2189 -This study examines **how media framing influences public attitudes on same-sex marriage and civil unions**, analyzing **news coverage from 2004 to 2011**. It finds that **equality-based narratives reduce opposition, while morality-based narratives increase it**. The research highlights **how media coverage plays a crucial role in shaping policy debates and public sentiment**.
2190 -
2191 ----
2192 -
2193 -## **📄 Download Full Study**
2194 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1111_j.1747-1346.2007.00092.x_abstract.pdf]]
2195 -
2196 -{{/expand}}
2197 -
2198 -{{html}}<hr style="border: 3px solid red;">{{/html}}
2199 -
Cultural Voyeurism A New Framework for Understanding Race, Ethnicity, and Mediated Intergroup Intera.pdf
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