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Emerging Biosocial Perspectives

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Sourcebook of family theories and methods: A contextual approach (pp. 677-710) ... and the family has an influence on primate biology and the health of its members. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emerging Biosocial Perspectives


1
Emerging Biosocial Perspectives
  • Troost, K. M., Filsinger, E. (1993).
    Emerging biosocial perspectives in the family.
    In P. G. Boss, W. J. Doherty, R. LaRossa, W. R.
    Schumm, S. K. Steinmetz (Eds.), Sourcebook of
    family theories and methods A contextual
    approach (pp. 677-710) New York Plenum Press.

2
Introduction
  • Biosocial Domain the connection between the
    biological and the social as
  • independent causal agents, and
  • as intertwined elements of human evolution and
    proximate life.
  • Role of the Family
  • Evolutionary or Historical Relevance (a/k/a
    ultimate cause) sexual and cooperative bond
    results in continuation of society.
  • Proximate Cause
  • families mediate the interplay of biological and
    social factors
  • biological and social factors contribute to
    family phenomena.

3
Core Assumptions
  • Humans have an evolutionary origin.
  • The family has played an important role in human
    evolution. Van de Berghe (1988) suggests that
    sociality can be reduced to three principles
  • Nepotism organisms invest in their own kin.
  • Reciprocity exchange of favors.
  • Coercion the act of being forced to act against
    ones interests.
  • The evolutionary origin of humans has an
    influence upon families today.
  • Proximate biology has an influence on the family,
    and the family has an influence on primate
    biology and the health of its members.
  • Genetic factors (e.g., predisposition to disease)
    influence family life.
  • Families influence the health of members because
    they are health care providers.

4
Core Assumptions(cont.)
  • Biosocial influences are both biological and
    social in character.
  • The biosocial domain is concerned with three
    factors the biological, biosocial, and social.
  • Human biological and biosocial variables do not
    determine human conduct but pose limitations and
    constraints as well as possibilities and
    opportunities for families.
  • A biosocial approach takes an intermediate
    position between those who emphasize the
    similarity between humans and other animals and
    those who emphasize the differences.
  • Humans are animals with an evolutionary origin.
  • Humans have a species history which distinguishes
    it from other animals the coevolution of biology
    and culture makes humans more complex than other
    animals.

5
Core Assumptions(cont.)
  • Adaptation is assumed to have taken place over a
    vast period of time. Adaptations in physiology or
    conduct vary by environment.
  • Extant features of human biology can be used to
    reveal aspects of our adaptation in the past (see
    Troost, 1988a, Turke, 1988).
  • Proximate, distal, and ultimate levels of
    interpretation can be approached separately
    ideally they will be integrated.

6
Myths About Humans and the Biosocial
  • Humans are unique.
  • Although humans posses some unique traits, so do
    other species.
  • Other species, for example,
  • use tools,
  • culturally transmit learned adaptations,
  • communicate,
  • demonstrate consciousness and thought.
  • Biology mandates uniformity.
  • Biological analyses are inherently only about
    individuals, not relationships. Evolutionary
    selection, for example, influences
  • reproduction,
  • food gathering,
  • social facilitation,
  • competetion management,
  • division of labor,
  • cultural transmission,
  • socialization,
  • and interpersonal communication.

7
Model of the Human in the Family Context
  • Introduction
  • There is a complex interplay between proximate
    (immediate) and ultimate (evolutionary)
    influences.
  • Ontogeny, an individuals life course
    development, is influenced by the interplay of
    biological makeup and social environment (p.
    685).
  • Biological blueprints limit environmental input.
  • Environmental constraints limit biological
    predispositions.
  • Organisms, influenced by biological
    predispositions, actively select environments.
    This is known as niche building (Scarr
    Mcartney, 1983).

8
Model of the Human in the Family Context (cont.)
  • Extending the Model
  • Life span development influences adaptability.
  • Departure from normal developmental patterns
    can cause system breakdown (e.g., excessively
    early or late marriage and childbearing have
    long-term implications).
  • Causation
  • Proximate causation immediate influences.
  • Distal causation intermediate causes (e.g.,
    affect of parent-infant bonding/attachment on
    later development).
  • Ultimate causation evolutionary influences.

9
Causation
  • Ultimate Causation
  • Fundamental question How has the family
    contributed to the success of humans?
  • What was the character of our evolutionary past?
    . . . How has our evolutionary history affected
    the attributes of the family?
  • What principles of sociobiology apply to humans?
  • Cultural diversity issues Where and under what
    ecological circumstances does the biosocial . . .
    encourage variety in kinship formation?
  • Why is the family a universal phenomenon?
  • Proximate Causation
  • Fundamental question How do biology and society
    interact to form the biosocial family of today?
  • What are specific biosocial covariates what are
    self-selection or niche-building effects?
  • What influences flexibility? What influences
    rigidity?

10
Main Problems Addressed by the Theory
  • Reproduction and Fertility
  • What are the mechanisms directly affecting
    reproduction?
  • What are some of the reproductive questions
    facing humans?
  • Parental Investment
  • What are the mechanisms that support parental
    investment and how are they likely to be
    interpreted?
  • Who will do the investment and will it be through
    care, food, defense, or some other means?
  • Why is there such a heavy burden on parents
    would it not make them and their offspring
    vulnerable?
  • How does the family today foster selection and
    reproduction of its members?

11
Main Problems Addressed by the Theory (cont.)
  • Adult and Co-parental Bond
  • What are the mechanisms that promote adult,
    co-parental bonds and marriage?
  • How do these bonds differ and is this difference
    supported biosocially?
  • Do married individuals of childbearing age who
    have infertile partners suffer lower marital
    quality and higher marital dissolution rates?
  • Does marital stability vary after menopause
    independently of children?
  • What accounts for initial and enduring attraction
    and what is the role of the biosocial in
    comparison to psychological or social-only
    effects?

12
Main Problems Addressed by the Theory (cont.)
  • Sexuality
  • What are the mechanisms regulating sexuality?
  • How is sexuality linked to reproduction, adult
    bonding, and parental investment?
  • How are fidelity, parental certainty, and the
    kinship system related to parental investment?
  • How do male and female sexuality mesh?
  • Are human beings more sex driven than
    reproductively driven is this age dependent?
  • What role is played by the human capacity for
    trust and deception?

13
Main Problems (cont.)
  • Family Life Course Timing Windows and Breakdowns
  • What are the biosocial pathways over the
    individual life course and at what points are
    they particularly subject to breakdown what
    mechanisms support these pathways and timing
    periods?
  • What are the time periods in individual
    development when a person is vulnerable to
    particular negative events?
  • Are there windows of opportunity during which a
    person is unusually sensitive to a positive
    influence e.g., imprinting?
  • If a person wants to be a grandparent, when
    should they begin attraction, bonding, sexual
    activity, and childbearing?
  • Is miscarriage influenced by family life course,
    relational context, and availability of
    resources?
  • How does individual development fit together with
    family development?
  • How are individual and family development
    influenced by parent-child bonding, parental
    investment, reproduction, and sexuality?

14
Examples of Research
  • Family Medicine
  • Biopsychosocial model illnesses are influenced
    by several interacting systems.
  • Family members tend to share risk factors,
    influenced by both environmental and genetic
    factors.
  • Stress has a negative impact on health family
    dynamics influence stress.
  • Four perspectives on families and illness (based
    on Steinglass Horn, 1988)
  • The family can be a resource that provides social
    support and acts as a buffer.
  • The family can be a deficit, inducing illness.
  • The family can affect the course of the illness
    and influence recurrences.
  • The illness can have a major impact on the family.

15
Examples of Research (cont.)
  • Family Violence
  • Spousal abuse
  • Men are more likely to try to control their
    partner because paternity is more difficult to
    ascertain.
  • This controlling behavior is associated with
    violence.
  • Abuse is also associated with investment women
    who were trying to end relationships were at
    greater risk for abuse.
  • Child abuse
  • Conflict is highest when parental investment is
    low.
  • Risk factors infancy, paternal uncertainty,
    stepparenting, scarce resources (Daly Wilson,
    1987, 1988a,b).

16
Research and Theories on Interaction between
Biology and Society
  • Odor Communication
  • Kin recognition and attachment
  • Infants respond differently to their mothers
    odors than to odors from other mothers. This has
    evolutionary utility.
  • Reaction to odors affects caregiving.
  • Mate selection and sexual attraction odors
    influence attraction.
  • Physiological Indications of Family Phenomena
  • Marital satisfaction physiological indicators
    can predict current and future marital
    satisfaction (Gottman, 1983 Levenson Gottman,
    1985).
  • Adolescent sexuality androgen levels are
    associated with masturbation and sexual
    motivation in adolescent boys.

17
Research and Theories on Interaction between
Biology and Society (cont.)
  • Physiological Indications of Family Phenomena
    (cont.)
  • Sexual differentiation
  • Gender differentiation of the brain and nervous
    system appears to reflect some physical brain
    structure differences.
  • Gender differentiation is linked to gender
    differences in
  • cognitive style,
  • brain lateralization,
  • spatial ability.
  • Aggression in men is associated with testosterone.

18
Limitations of the Theory
  • Overstatement of biological forces.
  • Scientific studies of natural differences
    have been used to exploit or oppress (e.g., The
    Bell Curve).
  • Biological explanations are reductionistic.
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