SerialStateLineXer
SerialStateLineXer t1_je9670e wrote
Reply to comment by Top_Of_Gov_Watchlist in Firearms deaths involving preschool-aged children had increased at an alarmingly high rate in the United States in the past decade, but state laws may help curb shooting deaths among young children. by Wagamaga
In this study it specifically refers to children under the age of 5, but stats for overall homicide rates are very similar.
Justifiable homicide is relatively rare, but likely has the same pattern.
SerialStateLineXer t1_je83s9x wrote
Reply to comment by Klass13 in [OC] Research Funding vs Human Development: a country's R&D spending correlates with its societal well-being by latinometrics
People who take antidepressants are more depressed than people who do not. If we just look at the correlation, we might assume that antidepressants cause depression, but the opposite is true.
In this case, there's still a correlation, but the sign is the opposite of the true causal effect of taking antidepressants.
Alternatively, consider a car being driven over a hilly road at a constant speed. When the car is going uphill, it's burning more gas. There's no correlation between speed and gas consumption, but gas consumption increases speed.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jcjnke9 wrote
Reply to comment by keziahw in Loss of Menin helps drive the aging process, and dietary supplement can reverse it in mice by geoxol
I asked Chat GPT about a seminal paper in a niche area (rare genetic disease), and it got the citation right. I think the key is that it has to be a paper that's discussed in the training data.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jcjnfj7 wrote
Reply to comment by chance_waters in Loss of Menin helps drive the aging process, and dietary supplement can reverse it in mice by geoxol
To be clear, you can't reverse aging just by heating up or overfeeding an old person. The point is that aging and death on human time scales are not an inevitable consequence of the laws of thermodynamics. Entropic changes can be reversed using an external source of energy (e.g. you can use energy to set up bowling pins after knocking them down). With the right technology, it is absolutely possible to repair aging-associated damage and restore an old person to a youthful state. It's a very difficult engineering problem, but there's no theoretical reason it can't be done.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jc66n69 wrote
Reply to comment by Lynxesandlarynxes in Why is death by respiratory failure in cases when the problem is only muscular (and not a problem with the lungs themselves) so prevalent? why is it so hard to assist respiration long term? Why are ventilators so unsophisticated and brutal on the lungs? by Eschatologists
Would a negative-pressure ventilator like an iron lung solve some of these problems, and if so, is there active research into developing more lightweight alternatives? What about diaphragmatic stimulation?
SerialStateLineXer t1_jc65u3d wrote
Reply to comment by aggasalk in When someone goes into an accident-induced coma at what point is it unlikely that they will ever wake up? by Legodudelol9a
OP asked about accident-induced coma, while this study specifically excludes trauma-induced comas, concentrating on comas arising from medical conditions like diabetes, heart attack, or stroke.
I looked around a bit, and while I wasn't able to find any relevant papers quite as explicit as this is one, from what I found it doesn't look like the odds of recovery from trauma-induced comas are much better, and they may be worse.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jb5l8n8 wrote
Reply to comment by Georgie___Best in Understanding Heritability (h^2) Statistic? by Chance_Literature193
Are you under the impression that heritability of height is defined as the correlation between children's heights and the average of their parents' heights? Obviously you can determine that by calculating said correlation, but that's not what heritability means.
Heritability refers specifically to share of variation in a trait attributable to genetic variation. I suppose it's possible that there's some field other than genetics in which the term is used to refer to the degree to which children are similar to their parents, but the original question specifically referred to the definition used in genetics, and you definitely can't calculate that by comparing children to their parents. If you could, twin studies would never have been invented. That's the exact problem they were invented to solve.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jb0xois wrote
Reply to comment by GeriatricHydralisk in Understanding Heritability (h^2) Statistic? by Chance_Literature193
>So to estimate heritability, you regress your height against the average of your parents' heights.
No, you can't estimate heritability that way, because this can't distinguish between genetic and environmental transmission of traits.
Traditionally, heritability is estimated with twin studies, using Falconer's formula. You compare the correlation between pairs of monozygotic twins to the correlation between pairs of same-sex dizygotic twins. You can exploit the fact that MZ twins are twice as genetically similar as DZ twins but MZ and DZ twins are raised in equally similar environments to determine heritability.
So if the MZ correlation is 0.7 and the DZ correlation is 0.4, this implies that 60% (2 * (0.7 - 0.4)) of the variation in the trait can be attributed to genetics, 30% (1.0 - 0.7) to non-shared environment (environmental factors that differ between twins) and the remaining 10% to shared environment (environmental factors that are the same for both twins).
There are some additional adjustments you can do for things like gene-environment correlation, but that's the simplified version.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jb0vxw2 wrote
Reply to comment by chazwomaq in Understanding Heritability (h^2) Statistic? by Chance_Literature193
>It means 100% of the phenotypic variation depends on genes, which is quite different.
More precisely, it usually refers to share of the variation within the specific population being studied. For example, when measuring the heritability of height in a wealthy country, you will get a very high heritability estimate, perhaps 0.8-0.9. When measuring the heritability of height in a global population, you'll get a lower heritability estimate, because a significant fraction of your sample will have had their growth somewhat limited by environmental factors like undernutrition or disease. Conversely, if you're studying a population of clones, the heritability will be zero, because there's no genetic variation and all variation must be due to environment.
None of these estimates is more correct than the other, because heritability can only be defined for specific populations with specific distributions of genetic and environmental factors. There is no "ideal heritability."
SerialStateLineXer t1_jazyfer wrote
Reply to comment by TheWoodConsultant in On Facebook, Visual Misinfo Widespread. In the runup to the 2020 U.S. Presidential election visual misinformation was widespread across the platform, and that it was highly asymmetric across party lines, with right-leaning images five to eight times more likely to be misleading. by Wagamaga
>“Vaccinations can have serious side effects that cause more harm than some of the diseases that they are supposed to prevent.”
That's technically true. The COVID-19 vaccines could very rarely cause GBS, anaphylaxis, and dangerous blood clots, all of which are more dangerous than COVID-19 for the typical person.
Cost-benefit analysis heavily favored getting vaccinated, of course, but that's a very badly designed survey question.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jau22ef wrote
Reply to comment by Clock586 in Too much or too little sleep could be making you sick more. Those who reported sleeping less than six hours a night were 27% more likely to report a recent infection, and those who reported more than nine hours sleep were 44% more likely to report one. by MistWeaver80
Too much sleep is likely also causation, but in the other direction.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jadlz4f wrote
Reply to comment by MundanePlantain1 in Researchers have developed a new device that can detect and analyse cancer cells from blood samples, enabling doctors to avoid invasive biopsy surgeries, and to monitor treatment progress by giuliomagnifico
This happens, without fail, in every thread about using blood tests to diagnose cancer. Usually multiple times. It's Holmes' Law.
SerialStateLineXer t1_jadlscb wrote
Reply to comment by Suthek in Researchers have developed a new device that can detect and analyse cancer cells from blood samples, enabling doctors to avoid invasive biopsy surgeries, and to monitor treatment progress by giuliomagnifico
Cells produce molecules which circulate in the blood, so you don't have to wait for circulating cancer cells. The tricky part is finding molecular signatures that identify cancer with high sensitivity and specificity.
For example, elevated prostate-specific antigen is a sign of something wonky going on in the prostate, which may be cancer, but also may not.
Edit: See responses. This comment isn't relevant to this particular device, which actually looks for cancer cells in the blood.
SerialStateLineXer t1_ja6vkwg wrote
Reply to comment by muzukashidesuyo in Unpredictable childhood environments linked to food addiction in adulthood by chrisdh79
What the other commenter said. Environment has made recent generations fatter than older generations, and makes people in rich countries fatter than people in poor countries, but in wealthy countries, within the current generation, genetics explains most of the variance in obesity, while upbringing explains very little.
This paper is based on a sample in Macao, and I don't know of any twin studies that were conducted in Macao specifically, so it's possible that they've found a causal factor that's peculiar to Macao or other wealthy East Asian countries. But we should be skeptical of this as a general causal explanation for obesity, given that it's contradicted by twin studies.
Edit: Note that the heritability of obesity doesn't mean that different people with the same lifestyle end up with wildly different BMIs because of genetics. Behavioral traits are also strongly heritable, and it's likely that much of the genetic contribution to obesity is mediated by genetic influences on lifestyle choices, rather than by genetic influences on metabolism.
SerialStateLineXer t1_ja2xnqq wrote
Reply to comment by chrisdh79 in Unpredictable childhood environments linked to food addiction in adulthood by chrisdh79
It's important to note here that twin studies have found obesity to be very strongly heritable with minimal contribution from shared environment.
Since this study used mediation analysis, which can't be used to demonstrate causality, we should be skeptical of causal claims made by the authors.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j9e5pgq wrote
Reply to comment by BafangFan in Deficits in executive function linked to weight excess in preschoolers by chrisdh79
>I don't think young toddlers know what a calorie is, or how many they need - or the difference between a good calorie and a bad calorie.
Perhaps also worth noting that obesity is a relatively new problem in Thailand. While the obesity rate is rapidly increasing, it was below 5% only 20 years ago. It's not a problem they've been dealing with for multiple generations the way we have in the West, and the grandparents of today's children grew up in a time when hunger was a much bigger problem than obesity.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j9e4owm wrote
Reply to comment by BafangFan in Deficits in executive function linked to weight excess in preschoolers by chrisdh79
I can think of at least three possible explanations:
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Executive function is heritable, and parents with poor executive function are more likely to overfeed their children.
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Children with poor executive function behave in a manner that prompts parents to overfeed them.
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Overeating and obesity impair executive function, even in young children.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j99apep wrote
Reply to comment by Educational-Stock708 in Females' propensity to deposit more fat in places like their hips, buttocks and the backs of their arms, so-called subcutaneous fat, is protective against brain inflammation, which can result in problems like dementia and stroke, at least until menopause, scientists report. by QualityWork_
As I understand it, the claim here is not that subcutaneous fat is protective, but that visceral fat is extra harmful, and that, holding total fat constant, a tendency to store fat subcutaneously is protective because the alternative is storing it viscerally.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j8i3gwk wrote
Reply to comment by Wagamaga in A study in the US has found, compared to unvaccinated people, protection from the risk of dying from COVID during the six-month omicron wave for folks who had two doses of an mRNA vaccine was 42% for 40- to 59-year-olds; 27% for 60- to 79-year-olds; and 46% for people 80 and older. by Wagamaga
You got the title wrong. The numbers you cite in the title are relative mortality risk, not the reduction in risk of mortality. So people age 60-79 were 27% as likely to die (i.e. 73% less likely), not 27% less likely (73% as likely), as implied by your title.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j8c8hox wrote
Reply to comment by moredinosaurbutts in Chinese researchers have reported what they claim is the world’s youngest person diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, which may overturn the conventional perception that cognitive impairment rarely occurs in young people. by Wagamaga
It's worth keeping in mind that most common neurodegenerative diseases are syndromes: clusters of diseases defined by symptoms and certain aspects of the disease process rather than by root cause. Even Huntington disease is actually a class of genetic mutation rather than one specific mutation: a sequence of three nucleotides is repeated many times, but the number of repetitions varies and affects the severity and age of onset. There are dozens of different mutations known to cause ALS, and severity, age of onset, and specific symptoms vary accordingly.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j8blsqu wrote
Reply to comment by moredinosaurbutts in Chinese researchers have reported what they claim is the world’s youngest person diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, which may overturn the conventional perception that cognitive impairment rarely occurs in young people. by Wagamaga
It's probably just that the more aggressive degenerative process needed for onset at a young age also leads to faster progression.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j7v1k9e wrote
Reply to comment by Ray_Pingeau in People from the poorest backgrounds are far more likely to develop a mental disorder later in life than those from wealthier beginnings. More than half of people with a low educational attainment at age 30 will have a diagnosis of a mental disorder 22 years later by Wagamaga
Other way around. Better mental health contributes to higher educational attainment and to not having to struggle to put a roof over your head.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j7e4iax wrote
Reply to comment by scrapper in An anti-aging gene discovered in a population of centenarians less prone to cardiovascular complications, has been shown to rewind the heart's biological age by 10 year by giuliomagnifico
> The Bristol team, led by Professor Paolo Madeddu, has found that a single administration of the mutant anti-aging gene halted the decay of heart function in middle-age mice. Even more remarkably, when given to elderly mice, whose hearts exhibit the same alterations observed in elderly patients, the gene rewound the heart’s biological clock age by the human equivalent of more than ten years.
That's where "rewind" comes from. It restored cardiac function in elderly mice when administered late in life.
SerialStateLineXer t1_j6cnwjw wrote
Reply to comment by Beginning_Cat_4972 in What makes it difficult to determine whether nutrient deficiencies are implicated in mental-health issues like ADHD? by LinguisticsTurtle
>You're probably not going to get IRB approval for raising kids on any vitamin deficit.
You can't do that, but can't you select a group of children and give some of them supplements? If some of the kids in the control group don't get enough of certain nutrients...well, that was going to happen anyway.
SerialStateLineXer t1_je96aw7 wrote
Reply to comment by M00n_Slippers in Firearms deaths involving preschool-aged children had increased at an alarmingly high rate in the United States in the past decade, but state laws may help curb shooting deaths among young children. by Wagamaga
Homicide means killing someone for any reason, including self defense. Hence the FBI publishes stats on justifiable homicides.