Title: The Genetics of Behavior
1The Genetics of Behavior
- Are we nature or nurture?
2Two basic views
Emphasize genes and inborn characteristics
Emphasize learning and experience
3Evolutionary Psychology
- Emphasizes evolutionary mechanisms that may help
explain human commonalities in - Cognition, development, emotion, social practices
and other behavior.
4Behavioral Genetics
- An interdisciplinary field of study concerned
with the genetic basis of behavior and
personality.
5An Understanding
- All scientists understand there is an interaction
between heredity and environment. - Set point - a genetically influenced weight
control mechanism vs. obesity in the US.
6The Secrets of Genes
- Genes - are the basic units of heredity located
on chromosomes which contain threadlike strands
of DNA. - Egg and Sperm contain 23 chromosomes each.
- Creating the genome
7Genome and what it means
- After conception each cell has 23 pairs of
chromosomes. (46) - Most traits depend on more than one gene pair.
8How are traits studied?
- Linkage studies - look for patterns of
inheritance of genetic markers in large families. - A genetic marker is a segment of DNA that varies
among individuals.
9The Genetics of Similarity
- Evolution is a change in gene frequencies within
a population over many generations. (mutation) - Natural Selection is a process in which
individuals adapt to a particular environment and
survive.
10Evolutionary Psychologists
- They look to the prehistoric record to draw
inferences about behavior that solved survival
problems - Because of evolutionary history some qualities
are universal
11Evolutionary Psychologists
- Universal qualities are.
- Reflexes
- Attraction to novelty
- A desire to explore and manipulate objects
- An impulse to play and fool around
- Basic mental skills
12Our Human Heritage
- The origins of perception
- Sensation - the detection of physical energy
emitted or reflected by physical objects. - Perception - the process by which the brain
organizes and interprets sensory information
13Our Human Heritage
- Some abilities develop from certain experiences
at certain times. - Complex features are processed by specialized
detectors - Inborn perceptual abilities include
- Startle reflex 3. Voice recognition
- Audio location 4. Discrimination of smells
14The Face of Emotion
- Some expressions are universal and present from
birth - Universal facial expressions function in
communication.
15Sociability and Attachment
- Synchrony and sociability
- Newborns are sociable from birth
- They pay attention to human faces and show
synchrony - Attachment - the emotional tie that children and
their caregivers feel toward each other
16Sociability and Attachment
- Attachments contd
- Contact comfort which is the innate pleasure
derived from close physical contact. - Infants who do not develop secure attachments may
develop emotional and physical problems.
17The Capacity for Language
- Language is a system for combining meaningless
elements into utterances that convey meaning. - A childs vocabulary increases at a rapid rate.
18Language Development
- Requires the mastering of a complex set of rules
including - Surface structure - the way a sentence is
actually spoken - Deep structure - the meaning inferred by a
sentence - Syntax - the rules of grammar
19Language Development
- Children do not simply imitate adults
- They are able to perceive deep structure
- Noam Chomsky theorized that we have a
biologically based language acquisition device
that aids in language development.
20Chomskys Examples
- Children of different cultures go through similar
stages of linguistic development
- Children combine words in ways that adults never
would - Adults do not consistently correct their
childrens syntax yet they learn to speak or sign
correctly.
21Chomskys Examples
- Even children who are profoundly retarded acquire
language.
- Infants as young as 7 months can derive simple
linguistic rules from a string of sounds.
22Does Nurture Play a Role?
- Imitation does play a role because parents
correct the childs ungrammatical sentence. - There appears to be a window of opportunity to
learn language.
23Evolution, Courtship and Mating
- Sociobiology - an interdisciplinary field that
emphasizes evolutionary explanations of social
behavior in animals. - The view is that nature has selected
psychological traits and social customs that
promote propagation.
24Evolution, Courtship, and Mating
- Sociobiologists argue that males and females have
evolved different mating strategies. - Males to inseminate as many females as possible
and females be more selective. - As a result, males are thought to be more
promiscuous and drawn to sexual novelty, females
are more interested in stability.
25Sociobiology vs. Evolutionary
- Sociobiologists tend to argue by analogy to
nonhuman animals. Evolutionary biologists
recognize these are simplistic and misleading. - Critics argue that evolutionary explanations are
based on stereotype of gender. Theories are also
nonfalsifiable.
26The Genetics of Difference
- Heritability - is the statistical estimate of the
proportion of the total variance in some trait
that is attributable to genetic differences among
individuals within the group
27The Genetics of Difference
- An estimate of heritability applies only to a
particular group living in an particular
environment. - Heritability estimates do not apply to
individuals, only to variations within a group. - Even highly heritable traits can be modified by
the environment.
28Computing Heritability
- Research methods are used in an attempt to infer
heritability by studying people whose degree of
genetic similarity is know. - Adopted children share half their genes but not
environments with birth parents.
29Computing Heritability
- Identical (monozygotic) twins develop when a
fertilized egg divides into two parts. - Fraternal (dizygotic) twins develop from two
separate eggs fertilized by different sperm. - Identical twins raised apart from each other are
of special interest because they have identical
genes but a different environment.
30Heritability and Intelligence
- Intelligence quotient (IQ) - is a measure of
intelligence originally computed by dividing a
persons mental age by his or her chronological
age multiplied by 100 - Currently it is norms based.
31Genes and Individual Differences
- IQ scores are highly heritable with estimates
averaging around .50 in children and .60 to .80
in adults. - Scores of identical twins are always more highly
correlated than those of fraternal twins. - Scores with adopted children correlate higher
with birth parents vs. adoptive parents.
32The Question of Group Difference
- Race differences are controversial
- Asians as a group score higher than whites who
score higher than African Americans. - Some theorists have confused intra-group findings
with inter-group.
33The Question of Group Difference
- Minority children tend to have access to fewer
educational and material resources. - Well designed studies have failed to reveal
genetic differences.
34Genes and Personality
- Temperaments - physiological dispositions to
respond to the environment in certain ways
present in infancy and are assumed to be innate.
35Heredity and Temperament
- Differences in childrens temperaments appear
early in childhood. - Temperaments tend to remain stable throughout
childhood.
36Heredity and Traits
- A trait is a characteristic of an individual,
describing a habitual way of behaving, thinking
and feeling.
- Clusters of measures or scores that are highly
correlated are assumed to measure the same
underlying trait or ability.
- Factor analysis - a statistical method for
analyzing the inter-correlations among different
measures now applied to traits.
37Big Five Factors
- Introversion vs. extroversion
- Neuroticism or negative emotionality
- Agreeableness
- Conscientiousness
- openness
38Why are genes not everything?
- Not all traits are equally heritable or
unaffected by shared environments - Some studies may underestimate the impact of the
environment - Even traits that are highly heritable are not
rigidly fixed and can be modified by experience.