Interesting. I don't believe her. I think her purpose was to suggest that weight is nearly as immutable under changes in diet and exercise as height.
Well, average height is also increasing in the population. Does that mean that you could be as tall as me, if you weren't too lazy to grow?
Twin studies and adoptive studies show that the overwhelming determinant of your weight is not your willpower; it's your genes. The heritability of weight is between .75 and .85. The heritability of height is between .9 and .95.
On the other hand, I do think there's far more to appetite and obesity than willpower[1].
Are there people with genetics such that, had they been given a diabetes+obesity inducing diet as children, they would still be rail thin and fidgety, burning tons of calories without explicit exercise? I think there are.
But I expect interaction between environment and genes to be very high in obesity[2], so heritability can't be used on its own to draw that conclusion.
[1] "studies of monozygotic and dizygotic twins have unambiguously shown that there is a much greater resemblance in the degree of obesity between genetically identical monozygotic twins" - http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1119832 - this is evidence for genetic variation in obesity with nearly constant environmental factors (clearly the availability of calories is a prerequisite for obesity).
[2] Extensive fictional evidence exists in the rotund mother who tries to fatten up her offspring when they return for the holidays: "put some meat on your bones!". Seriously,
Scrutinize claims of scientific fact in support of opinion journalism.
Even with honest intent, it's difficult to apply science correctly, and it's rare that dishonest uses are punished. Citing a scientific result gives an easy patina of authority, which is rarely scratched by a casual reader. Without actually lying, the arguer may select from dozens of studies only the few with the strongest effect in their favor, when the overall body of evidence may point at no effect or even in the opposite direction. The reader only sees "statistically significant evidence for X". In some fields, the majority of published studies claim unjustified significance in order to gain publication, inciting these abuses.
Here are two recent examples:
- Susan Pinker, a psychologist, in NYT's "DO Women Make Better Bosses"
- Megan McArdle, linked from the LW article The Obesity Myth
Mike, a biologist, gives an exasperated explanation of what heritability actually means:
Susan Pinker's female-boss-brain cheerleading is refuted by Gabriel Arana. A specific scientific claim Pinker makes ("the thicker corpus callosum connecting women's two hemispheres provides a swifter superhighway for processing social messages") is contradicted by a meta-analysis (Sex Differences in the Human Corpus Callosum: Myth or Reality?), and without that, you have only just-so evolutionary psychology argument.
The Bishop and Wahlsten meta-analysis claims that the only consistent finding is for slightly larger average whole brain size and a very slightly larger corpus callosum in adult males. Here are some highlights:
Obviously, if journals won't publish negative results, then this weakens the effective statistical significance of the positive results we do read. The authors don't find this to be significant for the topic (the above complaint isn't typical).
This effect is especially notable in media coverage of health and diet research.
This is disturbing. I suspect that many authors are hesitant to subject themselves to the sort of scrutiny they ought to welcome.
This is either rank incompetence, or even worse, the temptation to get some positive result out of the costly data collection.