Tuesday, December 9, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Mar, 2016 11:56 AM
  • Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes
Not only genes, even jobs may run in some families, and people within a family are proportionally more likely to eventually also choose the same occupation and this is especially true of twins, a Facebook study has revealed.
 
However, in absolute terms, the vast majority of kids strike their own path and choose a profession different than that of their parents or their siblings, the research added.
 
Facebook data scientists Ismail Onur Filiz and Lada Adamic analysed two related sets of data: one a sample of siblings' choices of profession, and the other of parent-child choices.
 
The sample included 5.6 million parent-child pairs in English-speaking locales who specified a sibling or parent-child relationship on Facebook, along with filling in their occupations.
 
The study first looked at father-son occupations and mother-daughter occupations.
 
“The interactive visualisation shows that the probability of a child's occupation falling into any given category does vary by occupation,” the team noted.
 
They first calculated the probability of a child having an occupation, given their father's occupation like a lawyer-father having a doctor-son (5 percent).
 
“We then calculated how elevated this probability is relative to the overall proportion of doctors among sons. In this case a son of someone in the legal profession is 4.6 times as likely to practice medicine than sons in general,” Filiz and Adamic noted.
 
Fathers in the military are more likely than average to have a son in protective service.
 
Even though relatively speaking, a child may be much more likely to follow in his or her parents' footsteps, the absolute percentage may still be quite low.
 
A son who has a father in the military is five times more likely to enter the military, but just one in four sons of a military professional does so.
 
For fathers in the dataset who work in farming, fishing and forestry, only 3 percent of their sons stay in the profession but this probability is 7.6 times the overall rate.
 
Nearly 20 percent of daughters of mothers who work in office and administrative support choose the same career. On the other hand, 8.5 percent of daughters of mothers in nursing also choose a career in nursing.
“We also see substantial cross-gender occupation “inheritance.” Scientist fathers have scientist daughters at 3.9 the overall rate, while mothers working in law have sons choosing a legal profession at 6.6 times the overall rate,” the team found.
 
A negative relationship, where a child is less likely to enter a profession due to their family background, is typically very small. For example for lawyer-fathers, the probability of their sons entering construction or maintenance or repair is about 85 percent of the overall likelihood.
 
Siblings not only share the same parent but sometimes, as in the case of identical twins, they share the same genes.
 
For the analysis of sibling occupations, the team considered a sample of 2.37 million same-gender siblings in the US who had filled in their occupations in their profiles.
 
“Nearly 15 percent of siblings share an occupation, which is higher than the 8.6 percent rate for any two same-gender, same-age individuals in the population. Twins' tendency to choose the same occupation, at 24.7 percent, is even more striking,” the team said.
 
Overall, the study found that people are more likely to “eventually” choose the same occupation but overall the “vast majority” of children choose their own career that’s different from their parents.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Twitter Tweaks Its Timeline To Look A Bit More Like Facebook

The social media site will let people turn on a setting that lets popular tweets related to people you follow show up first in your timeline, followed by the real-time feed most people on Twitter are used to.

Twitter Tweaks Its Timeline To Look A Bit More Like Facebook

NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India

NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India
India's government has essentially banned a Facebook program that sought to connect with low-income residents by offering free access to a limited version of the social network and other Internet services.

NET NEUTRALITY: Facebook Free Basics Banned In India

Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone

Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone
Until now, Apple offered credit to iPhone owners only if the device had an intact screen and working buttons.

Apple Now Accepting Your Banged-up iPhone

App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments

App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments
CHARLOTTETOWN — A P.E.I. company has developed a new online booking application aimed at reducing wait times at the doctor's office.

App Developed In P.E.I Aimed At Reducing Wait Times For Doctor Appointments

Two Indians MIT Researchers' Chip Powers Wearable Device To Guide Visually-Impaired

Two Indians MIT Researchers' Chip Powers Wearable Device To Guide Visually-Impaired
Researchers, including two Indians, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a low-power chip that could help visually-impaired people navigate their environments.

Two Indians MIT Researchers' Chip Powers Wearable Device To Guide Visually-Impaired

LinkedIn Shares Tumble On Weak Forecast For 2016

LinkedIn Shares Tumble On Weak Forecast For 2016
SAN FRANCISCO — LinkedIn shares plunged as much as than 28 per cent in after-hours trading Thursday after it reported better-than-expected results for the fourth quarter but provided a weak forecast for 2016.

LinkedIn Shares Tumble On Weak Forecast For 2016