Robert Sapolsky - Birth order and IQ, the relevance of the magnitude of the result

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2014
  • 08. Recognizing Relatives
    • 8. Recognizing Relatives
    00-18-29 - 00-29-37

Komentáře • 280

  • @mila9162
    @mila9162 Před 3 lety +14

    I sent this to my younger sister.

  • @zonedoyestander
    @zonedoyestander Před 10 měsíci +6

    I don't want to be a typical comment, but it really is amazing that this level of content is available for free on this platform.

  • @jonathanwalther
    @jonathanwalther Před 5 lety +15

    A very insightful and very important lesson for young researchers! You might dedicate years and years of your life to a certain idea, you even may find a significant result, but in the end this result still can be practically irrelevant as a whole.

  • @assistantto007
    @assistantto007 Před 5 lety +102

    The camera operator must have been the youngest of many brothers and sisters.....or maybe an only child?

  • @AlchemistTongueDrums
    @AlchemistTongueDrums Před 6 lety +51

    Amazing professor. He's so good at guiding the discussion with those students.

    • @madfoxcityemnau6414
      @madfoxcityemnau6414 Před rokem

      Ahh yes we can thank Socrates for that if you were educated in any Westernized country. In Catholic school they made us stand up and answer. That little bit of pressure also taught the skill of "thinking on your feet" a soft skill perfected by many a Catholic student 😆

    • @JohnDoe-lb4nc
      @JohnDoe-lb4nc Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@madfoxcityemnau6414
      Ah Yes, it also taught you to obey and do as your told…
      OR
      Every student in the U.S stands at attention whilst his/her hand held tightly against their heart and recites the same gibberish everyday. 😮

  • @ladywrench04
    @ladywrench04 Před 4 lety +7

    I am so jealous of people taking class with Dr. Sapolsky

  • @SoB_626
    @SoB_626 Před 5 lety +87

    Mozart was a first born, Bach a last born, Beethoven, the only child. What do we learn from this? Exactly! Classical music is the best!

    • @hunkydory3521
      @hunkydory3521 Před 5 lety +5

      Mozart had an older sister

    • @jonathanwalther
      @jonathanwalther Před 5 lety +3

      Daniel Fernald
      Wrong. The finding is about averages not single cases. Please learn statistic, don't be stubborn.
      Of course the effect size in this study laughable.

    • @solid8403
      @solid8403 Před 5 lety +4

      Guys, ... Mozart, Bach and Beethoven are anomalies. The theory is not flawed because of outliers.

    • @jonathanwalther
      @jonathanwalther Před 5 lety

      Daniel Fernald
      Can you elaborate your point? What do you mean with "unsettling" and "not useful" with respect to the discussed finding?
      Btw, I wrote the effect size is laughable, hence may be (or even sjould be?) considered useless in terms of practical value, but nonetheless it seems to be a valid finding.

    • @bkkdoesitbetter7614
      @bkkdoesitbetter7614 Před 5 lety

      No one said last borns or only children are destined to be slow idiots. The whole family could be very smart. I think they’re just talking about overall how does birth order affect iq relative to their siblings.

  • @alohaoliwa
    @alohaoliwa Před 8 lety +16

    What a poignant point at the end! Such a smart guy

  • @swirlcrop
    @swirlcrop Před 5 lety +5

    Many of R. Sapolsky´s talks are just excellent.

  • @sarahaugustine4185
    @sarahaugustine4185 Před 5 lety +38

    Science has taken a nose dive. Critical thinking is not at its best. Just take a small look a nutrition science. Studies hidden, thrown out or totally misinterpreted to align with an agenda. This professor is doing his best to get his students to think outside the box. Good on him.

    • @timearly5226
      @timearly5226 Před 5 lety +9

      Nutritional science has the worst reputation in the scientific community for those reasons.
      You may be interested in a New York Times article:
      "How the Sugar Industry Shifted Blame to Fat"
      It explains how prominent researchers were bribed to blame saturated fats for heart disease.

    • @SUSUGAM
      @SUSUGAM Před 5 lety +8

      Modern capitalism corrupted science.

    • @barkli2978
      @barkli2978 Před 5 lety

      -

    • @serpentines6356
      @serpentines6356 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@timearly5226 I remember when that started happening.
      I grew up with a "health nut", label reader mom, so when all the "low fat" products started showing up I didn't buy into what they were selling. Plus, when I read the labels it was quite obvious what was happening.
      Besides, I loved fat, and knew it was just fine. We grew up on whole milk and butter. I would skim the cream off the top of the milk and make whipped cream, or butter.
      It's quite yummy, I highly recommend it.

  • @TipoQueTocaelPiano
    @TipoQueTocaelPiano Před 9 lety +69

    This had a really happy ending

    • @chillicheesedogsable
      @chillicheesedogsable Před 9 lety +9

      Citriano Torres Thanks for making that comment, I was about to leave the video, and I stayed because of this, and it was really a terrific, happy ending, thanks.

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered Před 7 lety +5

      In other words the answer to the ultimate question to the universe and everything is 42 which now equals 2.3 IQ points.

    • @myroseaccount
      @myroseaccount Před 4 lety

      There is no difference

  • @wildoutstandingworld4066
    @wildoutstandingworld4066 Před 5 lety +2

    Wow what a twist ending!! Extremely important lesson.

  • @MechShark
    @MechShark Před 8 lety +46

    The cameraman.. lol

  • @literatious308
    @literatious308 Před 5 lety +8

    My IQ just increased by 2.3 points!
    Great lecture
    Wish he’d done a critique of drug benefit reporting- that’s some seriously misleading hype. RR vs AR

  • @Domenic367
    @Domenic367 Před 5 lety +14

    I have 4 oldar siblings but im not stoopid!

    • @user-hk3eu7bg5y
      @user-hk3eu7bg5y Před 4 lety

      If you are a Robert Sapolsky fan or student. There's no way you can be be stupid. No one is calling you stupid by the way. Robert Sapolsky is is an intelligent and kind guy. Sometimes it is better to be kind than right though.

    • @Domenic367
      @Domenic367 Před 4 lety +1

      @@user-hk3eu7bg5y I'm only joking, i was trying to be ironic in my comment where I misspelled 'older' and 'stupid' on purpose.

  • @TheBrucepix
    @TheBrucepix Před 5 lety

    Great teacher!

  • @diegobrignone
    @diegobrignone Před 3 lety +6

    Amazing lecture. Thanks for this free piece of knowledge!

  • @marinatraverse8558
    @marinatraverse8558 Před 6 lety +16

    I love his lectures! I'd love to be a student lol very smart man

    • @JeffJohnson-db2nd
      @JeffJohnson-db2nd Před rokem

      He has been the reciepient of A Genius Grant in the late 1980s. He's a smart man.

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742
    @wisconsinfarmer4742 Před 5 lety +14

    My iq is like 74 and my older sibling are dummies clocking in at 79. So this doesn't approve of nothing.
    But I like beer.

    • @lildice1337
      @lildice1337 Před 5 lety +2

      70 is retarded....

    • @wisconsinfarmer4742
      @wisconsinfarmer4742 Před 4 lety +1

      Busted. Was just trying to talk like a trumper.

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety +2

      It was too obvious you were faking being that stupid.
      You properly used a contraction, you didn’t have a run-on sentence, and you also recognized that you were stupid, at a purported 74, without calling the scientific findings “gay” or “stupid”.
      You were too obvious lol

    • @crypt0t3ddy79
      @crypt0t3ddy79 Před 3 lety +1

      Not intelligent enough to convincingly fake stupidity ;P

    • @wisconsinfarmer4742
      @wisconsinfarmer4742 Před 3 lety

      @@crypt0t3ddy79 true

  • @pennyyeomans4115
    @pennyyeomans4115 Před 5 lety +13

    Sometimes the oldest sibling of a large family, as was my case, has to participate in parenting the younger siblings. It is like the siblings grew up in different families as truly their lives were much different. For instance by the time only a couple kids are left often the parents have more money. Just my thought. Thank-you

  • @hcg12333
    @hcg12333 Před 5 lety +2

    2.3 IQ points turns out to not be that trivial difference from a cognitive perspective but when you look at a actual long term life outcome among a people you'll find out that it's absolutely negligible

  •  Před 5 lety +14

    In the comments: clueless people who didn't watch the whole video

    • @MrKmanthie
      @MrKmanthie Před 5 lety

      Romário Rios yes. that & just plain ignorant, self-centered/narcissistic yokels who like to write stuff that belittles the more intelligent people in the video & tries to make these commenting trolls look like they aren't fools (but ironically, in doing so, they only succeed in making bigger fools of themselves!!! LOL!)

  • @madtrini
    @madtrini Před 5 lety +4

    Parents favor the first born. Continually treating the first born as though they are the most important and treating the younger ones as less important will result in this phenomenon

    • @gregoryhouse5903
      @gregoryhouse5903 Před 2 lety +2

      Definitely not always. My father was the youngest among his siblings, & he ALWAYS favored my youngest brother above me.

    • @user-gs1lz2pw9v
      @user-gs1lz2pw9v Před 9 měsíci +1

      They did a single child control for that

    • @alexnguyen3022
      @alexnguyen3022 Před 3 měsíci

      I’m not so sure about that. Most likely it’s the last born who is spoiled, not the first.

  • @RickDelmonico
    @RickDelmonico Před 8 lety +1

    Epigenetic phenomena.

  • @thebluestplanet6768
    @thebluestplanet6768 Před 5 lety +2

    I'm more interested in the IQ difference between the second born and third born; If you could study that, then ALL of your questions about the first study would be answered.

  • @realRonStubbings
    @realRonStubbings Před 5 lety

    I'm a second born and totally agree. My brother is brighter than I am but I'm more sociable.

  • @joeystickfigure1756
    @joeystickfigure1756 Před 5 lety +3

    He is right, I am a first born and my IQ is 142, My brother the second born's IQ is 141.

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety +1

      Oh, is that all? 😂
      I’m only being sarcastic.
      Congrats on winning the brain lottery and being able to contribute to the study of sibling-related IQs!

  • @texcatlipocajunior144
    @texcatlipocajunior144 Před 5 lety +1

    My question would be, how does the age difference between siblings impact this effect?

  • @jessicawilson8825
    @jessicawilson8825 Před rokem +2

    What about twins? Does this still apply if one child is born 1 minute before the other?

  • @BarriosGroupie
    @BarriosGroupie Před 10 měsíci

    I bet the class felt humbled at the end like the majority who watched this.

  • @candleankle1805
    @candleankle1805 Před 7 lety

    I also know quite a few latter born who are much more intelligent than the older siblings. I will say my older brother has a slightly higher internal drive, i contribute it to him not questioning what he is doing and why he is doing it, as much as myself.

  • @suddenuprising
    @suddenuprising Před 7 lety

    what was the name of the study?

  • @stevendv8487
    @stevendv8487 Před 5 lety

    When you said "very statistically reliable" I assumed you meant "significant". And if a difference is statistically significant, it already implies it is a big difference enough. So you got me bamboozled.

  • @mJC4698
    @mJC4698 Před 5 lety

    Ooofff had me worried there for a sec

  • @williamchurch711
    @williamchurch711 Před rokem

    What's the name of the study?

  • @vinayseth5899
    @vinayseth5899 Před 11 měsíci

    Illuminating indeed. But even though the difference is statistically negligible, it still requires an explantion I suppose 🤷‍♂️

  • @ataraxia7439
    @ataraxia7439 Před 11 měsíci

    Does anyone know which study he’s talking about?

  • @Nathandj-vx7xo
    @Nathandj-vx7xo Před 4 lety

    sometimes the first born gets the military...and the second gets left alone to learn...the learned one or the second is definitely the brighter from what a childhood witness has scene?

  • @annereiner8951
    @annereiner8951 Před 6 lety +1

    perhaps it has something to do with the level of stress in the mother during pregnancy? The first pregnancy can said to be in general less stressful. During the second pregnancy the stress of having to raise a child and do all the work at home is probably impacting the metabolism of the mother. Higher stress levels might cause a change in how the fetus is exposed to stress hormones and therefore impact the brain development. Just a thought.

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 5 lety +1

    Some will power and a lot of won't are more useful than IQs that are adjustable anyway. It's not a good thing to study in isolation because anyone can change environments and be "someone else" better suited to the new context.

  • @amanda3172
    @amanda3172 Před 7 lety

    life lessons

  • @lettersquash
    @lettersquash Před 5 lety +2

    The take-away: your siblings (younger or older) have an IQ of about 2.3.

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety

      *a difference in IQ of about 2.3

    • @lettersquash
      @lettersquash Před 3 lety +1

      @@cgme9535 Yeah, but don't tell them that.

  • @JeffJohnson-db2nd
    @JeffJohnson-db2nd Před rokem

    Fue Fact: Also the length time a mother breast feeds her children determines her child's adult IQ will be. it's in Robert Sapolsky's Masterpiece book Behave: The Biology Of Humans At Our Best And Worst. ☮️

  • @mariamfadlalla1843
    @mariamfadlalla1843 Před 5 lety

    What a great teacher!

  • @christianfarina3056
    @christianfarina3056 Před 5 lety +1

    The cameraman is not a first born.

  • @menzoznem
    @menzoznem Před 5 lety +14

    Just for the record, averagely you will differ 2.3 IQ points. But for individual cases your older sibling can still be 10 points dumber or smarter than you, because he got better genes or whatever. I personally don't get why he did not give the standard deviation between IQ of siblings, because that would clear things up as well. Still very interesting vid :)

    • @kenanaojacob2854
      @kenanaojacob2854 Před 3 lety +5

      They were not going to be in separate standard deviations with a 2.3 difference, . . . to small. Not even a tenth of a standard deviation, . . . .

    • @timeisup3094
      @timeisup3094 Před rokem +2

      @@kenanaojacob2854 I agree. This person has no idea what he’s talking about. Also, this guy just proved his point by asking for standard deviation. Sapolsky’s message was how insignificant these findings are and how they are so small they don’t reach a standard deviation. 🤣

  • @ryancraigt
    @ryancraigt Před 5 lety +1

    Second born and my iq is almost 30 points higher then my older sister.

  • @uusees7907
    @uusees7907 Před 7 lety +1

    how many r we post natalist to whatever reluctant relati ity?

  • @martinjimenez9343
    @martinjimenez9343 Před 5 lety +1

    Bill Gates, second born no? Sapolsky is one the best teachers why he is on "The Great Courses" website, top notch teacher

  • @DreamsOfFinland
    @DreamsOfFinland Před 11 měsíci

    first born in my family was arrogant at high levels but not with IQ, and the last born ignored by mother showed genius signs.

  • @carlschultz4131
    @carlschultz4131 Před 11 měsíci

    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @rocketman475
    @rocketman475 Před 6 lety +1

    Sibling rivalry will cause the first born to dominate second born. Individual cases where large differences in IQ exist, should correlate with the severity of the dominance, resulting in higher overall depression of the dominated including their IQ.

    • @Lions4322
      @Lions4322 Před 6 lety

      Way to go, rocket man. Get that diploma!

  • @dancasey9660
    @dancasey9660 Před 5 lety +1

    Secretariat was like the 14th foal.

  • @bicycleetc9436
    @bicycleetc9436 Před 5 lety

    I would expect that since first born have more exposure to the parents.

  • @clutchcarabelli8054
    @clutchcarabelli8054 Před 5 lety

    Here's what's more important: what is The Offspring count between firstborns and the rest of them? I already know, because I'm a first born :-) and I also know that that is the true dilemma at hand

  • @MrWolynski
    @MrWolynski Před 5 lety +1

    2.3 points different. Its not even significant. Reliable and insignificant. I get it.

  • @Al-cynic
    @Al-cynic Před 9 dny

    What was the standard deviation and I also bet it wasn't five sigma, biology P values are accepted at around 3 sigma

  • @NoName-qv8ko
    @NoName-qv8ko Před rokem +1

    Now if we could only get Jordan Peterson to attend Robert Sapolsky's lectures (& JP keep his mouth shut for long enough to take it on board) social media might just start to change for the better.

  • @Michael-go9hm
    @Michael-go9hm Před 4 lety

    what course was he teaching. dam its interesting

    • @TheIHSAN666
      @TheIHSAN666 Před 11 měsíci

      Human behavioural biology. The whole series is on Stanford's yt channel. Highly recommend!

  • @glittergirl4759
    @glittergirl4759 Před 7 lety +7

    haha wut a twist at the end. love it

  • @psyaii6394
    @psyaii6394 Před 5 lety +1

    Great to think about, but the problem is the professor isn't a paper so even if he doesn't say a 'significant increase' then you assume it be to true otherwise why would he bring it up. It's outside of the box thinking in an institution where inside the box thinking is the be all and end all.

    • @VarjoFilosofi
      @VarjoFilosofi Před 5 lety

      2.3 points isn't much when comparing two individuals. That kind of difference like Prof. said could come from one sneeze and distraction. However if data had 250 000 test subjects like Prof. said it's clearly significant amount no question about it. 250 000 is statistically insane amount of test subjects..

  • @user-hk3eu7bg5y
    @user-hk3eu7bg5y Před 4 lety

    um...okay. please explain why my sister and i had the same IQ. I was nursed by mother until 2 years old. You mentioned in a Behave lecture that the longer a mother who nurses her child for a longer time increases the the child's IQ. Interestingly, according to a counselor who specializes in mitochondrial diseased kids with high IQs and learning disabilities, many of her clients/patients are off the charts in IQ. but she mentioned some of her patients could not read. i figure high IQ's possibly, are a survival trait. Those who could smith a better spear head were useful to the tribe and kept out of combat situations. Mito kids tend to have low ATP levels, and have to compensate for the lack of energy. I was a scrawny failure to thrive child, that was real fun to live up to as a kid. i was also too short to be a Stormtrooper. (it's okay, I'm here to rescue you. ) My MELAS syndrome onset at age 35. Dr. Enns in pediatrics genetics at Stanford University Medical Hospital. Oddly my sister has no learning disabilities and has a pHD and passed her BAR exam and is a lawyer for a major food company protecting their intellectual rights. i on the other hand have 2. Dysgraphia my hand writing is a sloppy mess no matter how much i practiced my alphabet. and school teachers knew how to hit a kid below the belt and make them feel bad about themselves, and slow processing, i never could finish those 100 math question tests in under 1 or 2 minutes, i could get the answers right, no problem. The public education system made feel like i was stupid. despite having an IQ that could have got me into MENSA. My mother suggested i join it when i was a Senior in High School.i asked why my sister wasn't in MENSA and my mother said "it's only for men. did you know 65% of the members of MENSA have black back hair?" i was like "nope. i will not join a sausage party for for geniuses." i didn't want to join a sexist boys club for geniuses. i wanted to meet intelligent women. I thought it was kind of stupid and sexist of MENSA from excluding women from joining. This was in the mid-1990's. i was like "why would they exclude intelligent women? it would make more sense if they encouraged smart dudes to be with smart women." 7 or 8 MELAS syndrome stroke like episodes later, and my IQ is still higher than average. So most people tend to misunderstand me. Still. it's gotten to be mildly annoying to be misunderstood all the time..

  • @annarboriter
    @annarboriter Před 5 lety +2

    So damned annoying. He states categorically that 2.3 points of IQ is too small to be meaningful and yet he doesn't suggest what minimum ought to be noteworthy. So much easier to criticize than to assert.

  • @anticandmore
    @anticandmore Před 8 lety +3

    Very interesting! To me the conclusion would be that siblings have almost the same level of intelligence... Which is not really surprising but still relevant. Did this researchers investigate the gender effect ? What is the importance of the gender (think of level of competitivity potential between sexes) of the first vs. the gender of the second child, or even the third, fourth etc? For example, my older sister of almost the same age (16 month difference) had a pretty parallel cognitive development with me: as an example, she began to speak at about the same moment as I did. Maybe because of a certain competition for attention and praise from our parents. Finally I ended being the one with the highest IQ and could study whatever I wanted. My sister became a nurse, also with a very high IQ, but with far less self-confidence than me (which is also a factor which influences the outcome of IQ tests)... I do not really know what this gets me too, but maybe it's interesting to brainstorm about this... ;)

    • @wingedthing1504
      @wingedthing1504 Před 7 lety +4

      Uh... the result was not statistically significant so the discussion is moot. The difference was within the margin of error.

    • @fakename2969
      @fakename2969 Před rokem

      social not biological

    • @user-gs1lz2pw9v
      @user-gs1lz2pw9v Před 9 měsíci +1

      Massive ego

  • @wizardOfRobots
    @wizardOfRobots Před rokem

    2.3 iq points would still mean that the older sibling is 5 months ahead of the younger sibling at 18 years old. I don't see how that's not significant.

  • @Id3arium
    @Id3arium Před 10 měsíci

    My IQ just went up by 2.3 points from watching this.

  • @poeticskeptic7052
    @poeticskeptic7052 Před 5 lety

    How many of those 250k first borns had the higher IQ? What percentage?

  • @Itchy__
    @Itchy__ Před 8 měsíci

    Maybe it's not statistically relevent. But people with ASD show a slightly higher than avarage IQ than allistic people, and ASD is more often seen in latter borns.
    So maybe it has to do with co occuring conditions as well, at least a little bit.

  • @jeffjohnson8624
    @jeffjohnson8624 Před 2 lety

    having been breast fed for 2 years did make a big difference. 🧠

  • @jcarlson2727
    @jcarlson2727 Před 5 lety +2

    I was the first born son, I have a brother. Trust me, it's more than 2 points.... lol

  • @MrMarco855
    @MrMarco855 Před 5 lety +3

    The scenario re: the 2nd born higher I.Q. until 12, the first born higher after 12 has a simple explanation. Let's say there's a 2 year gap between children. The younger at 3 years old is constantly around the 5 year old, thus absorbing from and elevating to the level of the older sibling ( It's not unlike a physical analogy regarding an athlete performing better if playing against better competition ). This remains true until the younger is 12 because at 14, the older child despises the younger being around and 'ruining' the older sibling's 'teenage' activities. Therefore the older avoids being around the nagging younger sibling. This ends the younger benefitting from being around a 2 year wiser sibling, the I.Q. of the younger sibling slowly reverts to a more age related level. The older is in a more challenging school environment heading into high school at 14, so the I.Q. accelerates somewhat due to more difficult studies. Most of us say it's a bit of a leap from 8th grade junior high school to the freshman year in high school. Also, at 14, the older sibling is now in the constant company of older students, gaining from them the way the younger sibling gained from the older previously. ( I should get an 'A' for the semester with genius like this).

    • @ben_alfred
      @ben_alfred Před 2 lety

      the younger sibling would have gone through the same education system, being around the ‘older kid’ at the same time in their developmental journey.

    • @ben_alfred
      @ben_alfred Před 2 lety

      so basically what I’m saying is… your getting a b-

  • @keineahnung74
    @keineahnung74 Před 4 lety

    My younger brother and I, no. 3 and 4 of 6, are the bright ones compared to older and younger sisters.

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety

      I think they need to do some isolated studies or a larger-reaching meta-analysis.
      I’d bet some money on it that these childhood dynamics aren’t the only thing out there. This doesn’t consider families that had twins or two children very close in age, making the age difference and parental exposure nearly negligible. I can think of other instances where that “first kid gets the most parental exposure” doesn’t work either.
      It’s definitely not the precedent for every family.
      I’m not butt-hurt or anything, I’m just pointing out that that study does not consider everything.

  • @li6706
    @li6706 Před 5 lety +1

    Great. Im the youngest of 4.

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety

      I’m the youngest of 3 lol
      I can relate.

  • @roshanabey2
    @roshanabey2 Před 7 lety +1

    this is really interesting.

  • @anothermike4825
    @anothermike4825 Před 2 lety

    My guess before he gives the answer, the first born has to explain everything to the younger siblings which makes them look more closely at problems and that's what increases their ability to concentrate on IQ tests.

    • @anothermike4825
      @anothermike4825 Před 2 lety

      The first born has to learn things themselves that they then teach to their younger siblings. The younger get the advantage of their older siblings knowledge and that is why they exceed their older sibling when they are 12. At 18 the early knowledge doesn't have the same effect over others their age because everyone has more or less caught up by then.

    • @khajiithadwares2263
      @khajiithadwares2263 Před rokem

      A mention of what also can happen KsYg7y4oayw&t=10m45s
      1. As you said: Older sibling gets to pave the road, be the model and gain first hand experience in life, also teach/reflect it back.
      2. Displacement aggression in primates; the weaker gets the stick - if older or bigger members of the group suffer a humiliation, bullying or a defeat, they can lash out at those weaker or closer to them that allows...
      Definately a component of dominating the weaker sibling, belittling, or lashing out of own frustrations.
      3. Younger get spoiled, older get "favourited" / one gets more candy to shutup the other gets to do stuff, guess which is more beneficial?
      Too much stress or unfair comparison to older sibling can cause breaking down, going back or becoming depressed.

  • @vernonhedge4530
    @vernonhedge4530 Před 5 lety

    6:04 How did they control for the fact that the first foetus died and the second foetus survived with a "first child IQ"? How could they avoid the ecological fallacy? I mean, they could say that these "atypical firstborns" (let's call them) had on average the same IQ as "typical firstborns", but since no one could measure the "first foetuses'" IQs (because they died in utero) how can they get the intra-familial contrasts? This is the same criticism that plagued almost all of the earlier Birth Order research.

    • @user-gs1lz2pw9v
      @user-gs1lz2pw9v Před 9 měsíci

      I'm assuming they are comparing iqs to successful first borns who lived.

  • @LuvThyMind29
    @LuvThyMind29 Před 6 lety +17

    Were the dislikes all from second borns?

    • @LuvThyMind29
      @LuvThyMind29 Před 6 lety

      What, because of the observation that second borns have higher intellect in their childhood years? First borns clearly get the better end of the deal.

    • @drasticallyfantastic7164
      @drasticallyfantastic7164 Před 5 lety +1

      @@LuvThyMind29 just watch the end of the video LOL

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety

      @@LuvThyMind29 :: He asks if it’s even consequential. It’s an average of 2.3 IQ points. It’s almost negligible, especially if you’re dealing with higher IQ ranges.

    • @LuvThyMind29
      @LuvThyMind29 Před 3 lety

      @@cgme9535 2 year old comment dude.

  • @johnbaker7102
    @johnbaker7102 Před 3 lety +1

    Actually a 2 IQ points difference is relatively big if you consider the older and later siblings IQ are normally distributed with similar variance. In the extreme right end (the higher IQs) the difference will be much more pronounced

  • @rm9308
    @rm9308 Před 5 lety

    1:26 Comparing them to only-childs doesn't rule anything out. Having siblings might in and of itself increase IQ, throwing off the comparison.

    • @rayali6703
      @rayali6703 Před 4 lety

      R M no bc then all the siblings would have an increased IQ

  • @krumpelschtiltzkeen
    @krumpelschtiltzkeen Před 5 lety

    😅🤣😂😆👏👏👏. Watch to the end.

  • @KLFD530
    @KLFD530 Před 4 lety

    The study should carry out until peoples 30s.

  • @jbradyb33
    @jbradyb33 Před 5 lety

    Not being pro or con here...IQ is the ability to learn and not what is actually learned...and that doesn't even touch on applicable intelligence. This discussion is a waste of time.

  • @001Catey
    @001Catey Před 4 lety

    LOL Promoting sibling rivalry. LOL

  • @lallyoisin
    @lallyoisin Před 5 lety

    But an only child would have specific external environment moulding that would not be the case with a first born.

    • @TheDoctornaut
      @TheDoctornaut Před 5 lety

      Controlled for

    • @lallyoisin
      @lallyoisin Před 5 lety

      @@TheDoctornaut Even today, only children are commonly stereotyped as "spoiled, selfish, and bratty". ... In China, perceived behavioral problems in only children has been called the Little Emperor Syndrome and the lack of siblings has been blamed for a number of social ills such as materialism and crime.
      They are an unreliable sample. I know 2 that are close to me that have larger than usual families. 5 and 6 offspring . Perhaps it's not a big enough pool but I'd say if one was to dig a bit only in China where numbers are restricted only children tend not to want to have one child.

  • @Divljina9
    @Divljina9 Před 7 lety

    ja

  • @emmanuelfrestad8476
    @emmanuelfrestad8476 Před 5 lety

    He said Norway, He said Norway!!!

  • @MrKFNeverGiveUp
    @MrKFNeverGiveUp Před 5 lety +2

    I'm the youngest of 6 sisters and 1 brother and I'm more intelligent than all of them. I'm not boasting or bragging at all, but I just happen to be the brainy one, the nerd in my family if you will.

    • @TheDoctornaut
      @TheDoctornaut Před 5 lety +3

      >boasts
      >lies about boasting
      >anecdotal anyway
      >missed point of video

    • @TheOzumat
      @TheOzumat Před 5 lety

      >meme arrows on jewtube

    • @MrKFNeverGiveUp
      @MrKFNeverGiveUp Před 5 lety

      The Doctornaut:
      What utter bullshit, The Doctornaut
      > I did not boast, I simply stated an obvious fact that's applicable only to me and my own family and personal circumstance.
      > Yes It is anecdotal because my comment only applies to me and my own family. (so of course it's going to be anecdotal)
      > I watched the whole video, and I missed nothing.
      > I'm still the clever-clogs in my family, simply because I was born this way. My whole family would agree with me. They always call me "The brains of the family"

  • @johnjones3332
    @johnjones3332 Před rokem

    this doesn't apply to broken homes.

  • @OrlandoPraag
    @OrlandoPraag Před 8 lety +5

    I would love to know how the age gap between children influences the difference in IQ. Is the decrease in IQ smaller when the age gap is greater?
    I wonder because I suspect that the difference in IQ grows at first and then decreases as the age gap becomes greater.
    The influence a older sibling has on the upbringing of younger siblings might decrease as the age gap increases simply because the interaction between siblings decreases from a certain age.

  • @jannhebrank5710
    @jannhebrank5710 Před 5 lety

    This is not true in the case of my family.

  • @googlesmoogle7126
    @googlesmoogle7126 Před rokem

    100% not true when it comes to my sister and I. The same goes for my husband and his siblings.

  • @sinolamp3448
    @sinolamp3448 Před 5 lety +1

    6:43 is that chick picking her nose?

    • @thebluestplanet6768
      @thebluestplanet6768 Před 5 lety

      She has a finger in the nose, another has a finger in his eye, and another has a finger in his mouth. All at the same time. Yuck!😝 This room would have Howie Mandel running the other way.

  • @gabilurio4270
    @gabilurio4270 Před 5 lety

    Dammit, every time people sneeze they lose IQ? 😁

  • @Longtack55
    @Longtack55 Před rokem

    Im #3 of six, and the least intelligent. #6 is the most intelligent and then #4, #1, #2, #5. If any of my siblings disagree I remind them that I am the tallest and strongest!!
    Were mostly in our 70s.

  • @MitzvosGolem1
    @MitzvosGolem1 Před 5 lety

    I am first born and my little bro is a millionaire I have nothing

  • @darkoz1692
    @darkoz1692 Před 5 lety +16

    Exactly why most studies are not worth a roll of toilet paper.

  • @bethsanchezyoga55
    @bethsanchezyoga55 Před 5 lety

    but hunting squirrels does develop intelligence. it ain't all about violin lessons.

  • @GypsMoth13
    @GypsMoth13 Před 5 lety +1

    Nothing Burger

  • @theguy9067
    @theguy9067 Před 5 lety +1

    Feel like I just wanted my time. Idgaf about 2 iq points !

    • @cgme9535
      @cgme9535 Před 3 lety

      2.3. That .3 is a real kicker 😂

  • @mikimiyazaki
    @mikimiyazaki Před 5 lety

    Fuck!! I'm a second born!!