> They're enough to explain 20% women at the +4 SD level if I recall correctly
That's right if we're looking at univariable distributions.
> But there are too many people in STEM fields for them to be so selective.
Actually I agree now that the variability hypothesis is insufficient to explain why there's so many more men than women that self-select into STEM.
I think a more plausible explanation is mean differences in interests (which may or may not be genetic).
The variability hypothesis can possibly help to explain things like why most chess champions are men, but it can't explain why most people that play chess in the first place are men.
That's right if we're looking at univariable distributions.
> But there are too many people in STEM fields for them to be so selective.
Actually I agree now that the variability hypothesis is insufficient to explain why there's so many more men than women that self-select into STEM.
I think a more plausible explanation is mean differences in interests (which may or may not be genetic).
The variability hypothesis can possibly help to explain things like why most chess champions are men, but it can't explain why most people that play chess in the first place are men.