These data are for both sexes though. Seemingly, the IQ link is stronger for men.pic.twitter.com/zbB6MNbKDG
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Experts can't access the data, except for the part I published in standard format. There's a few exceptions where others also used the data e.g. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10691898.2015.11889737 … andhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4533555/ …
I see. So it is *not* publicly accessible? Or only the part yo published in standard format? I imagine you need someone on board to develop a 'scraper' as well?
Most academics are not capable of scraping a dating site, so while the data is public, it's not in a suitable format (read: SPSS friendly).
What % of academics in social sciences you think know how to use SAS/Mplus/R? .csv .txt 
Programming knowledge is growing, but most profs are old and don't know anything other than point and click, or some limited syntax. Maybe 10% of social scientists know proper coding now, but it is rising with the youngsters. http://r4stats.com/articles/popularity/ …pic.twitter.com/Pk4Czk9TRi
No Mplus info?
Not my chart. I've never used MPlus. I just taught myself Python and then R. R has lavaan which covers my SEM needs.
Word. Yep, lavann is a nice library. I often use in parallel with Mplus.
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