How well can you predict height based on genetic markers?

A 2009 study came up with a technique for predicting the height of a person based on looking at the 54 genes found to be correlated with height in 5,748 people — and discovered the results were one-tenth as accurate as the 125–year-old technique of averaging the heights of both parents and adjusting for sex.

The quote above is from Wrong: Why experts keep failing us — and how to know when not to trust them by David Freedman.

The article Freedman quotes is Predicting human height by Victorian and genomic methods. The “Victorian” method is the method suggested by Sir Francis Galton of averaging parents’ heights. The article’s abstract opines

For highly heritable traits such as height, we conclude that in applications in which parental phenotypic information is available (eg, medicine), the Victorian Galton’s method will long stay unsurpassed, in terms of both discriminative accuracy and costs.

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