Positive coverage of a study linking genetics to beauty, will be savagely critiqued soon

Researchers identify 'beauty spots' in the genome

Genome-wide association study suggests variants underlying facial beauty varies by sex and claims to detect meaningful signal for these variants. This is an interesting study, but expect it to be attacked soon given recent work that highlights how population stratification can be misinterpreted as significant variant effects (e.g. Sohail, eLIFE, 2019). —RPR

Positive coverage of a study linking genetics to beauty, will be savagely critiqued soon

“Genes play a role in determining the beauty of a person's face, but that role varies with the person's sex, according to a new study by Qiongshi Lu and colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, published 4th April in PLOS Genetics.

Humans tend to be preoccupied with beauty -- a person's attractiveness is associated with academic performance, career success and economic mobility. But despite its importance, scientists know little about the genetic basis for having a pretty face. In the current work, researchers performed a genome-wide association study using genetic information from 4,383 individuals to pinpoint parts of the genome linked to facial beauty. They had volunteers score yearbook photos based on attractiveness from participants with European ancestry and compared the scores to each person's genetic information. The researchers identified several genes related to facial attractiveness, but their roles and relatedness to other human traits varied by sex. In women, certain genetic variations linked to beauty also appeared to be related to genes impacting body mass, while in males, variants were linked to genes affecting blood cholesterol levels.”



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