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control centers: four lobes (cont`d)
control centers: four lobes (cont`d)

... GENES & EVOLUTION (CONT’D) • Genetic factors – Researchers are discovering how genetic factors interact with the environment in the development of mental retardation, emotional and personality traits, mental disorders, and various cognitive abilities • Fragile X syndrome – An inherited developmenta ...
PowerPoint
PowerPoint

... The main challenge for in silico genotype-phenotype correlation for any genetic diseases is to standardize phenotype ontology terms and the genotype data. Earlier, we have developed and established a molecular disease database named RAPID— Resource of Asian Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases (PID) (h ...
Elyse Coolidge
Elyse Coolidge

... Of the 18 Oprm SNPs examined, the A118G SNP was included. Neither this SNP, nor any of the other 35 SNPs in Oprm and Oprd1 were found to be associated with alcohol, illicit drug, or opioid dependence. However, three SNPs on the Penk gene and two SNPs on the POMC gene were found to be associated with ...
traditional learning theories
traditional learning theories

... work indicates that since all behavior is learned, it can be determined by arranging the contingencies of reinforcement in the learner's immediate environment. Behaviorists since Skinner have taken into account certain aspects of the human organism but still emphasize that it is environment that con ...
lecture - Berkeley MCB
lecture - Berkeley MCB

... expression profiling, that the polycomb group protein enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is overexpressed in hormone-refractory, metastatic prostate cancer. … Dysregulated expression of EZH2 may be involved in the progression of prostate cancer, as well as being a marker that distinguishes indolent ...
Genes involved in ovulation rate and litter size in sheep
Genes involved in ovulation rate and litter size in sheep

... fertility traits in sheep and are of high economic value (Notter, 2008). Traits associated with fertility usually have low heritability and breeding improvements made on phenotypic selection based on observable data are often limited. Ovulation rate and litter size are also only expressed in one sex ...
Evolution of Gene Order and Chromosome Number in
Evolution of Gene Order and Chromosome Number in

... Figure 1 summarizes our model of yeast gene order evolution through tetraploidy, gene deletion and reciprocal translocation. In this study we have used gene adjacency conservation (the extent to which adjacent genes in one species are also adjacent in another) as a measure of gene order conservation ...
Correction to “Frequency of Undetected CYP2D6
Correction to “Frequency of Undetected CYP2D6

... The frequency of hybrids genes in CYP2D6*4 and CYP2D6*10 samples is reported for both heterozygous or homozygous and heterozygous alone. We did not determine whether one or both chromosomes contained a hybrid tandem in homozygous samples. For this reason, to determine the risk that a CYP2D6*4 or CYP ...
Word - The Open University
Word - The Open University

... Living organisms use the components of the world around themselves and convert these into their own living material. An acorn grows into an oak tree using only water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, some inorganic materials from the soil, and light energy. Similarly a human baby grows into an adult by diges ...
Annotation mapping functions
Annotation mapping functions

... For org.Bt.eg.db there is a data object for each set of data, such as mapping from Entrez Gene IDs to chromosome, org.Bt.egCHR. Some of the objects comes in pairs, such as Entrez and RefSeq there is org.Bt.egREFSEQ and org.Bt.egREFSEQ2EG. The latter can also be obtained with revmap(org.Bt.egREFSEQ). ...
Genetics and Genomics
Genetics and Genomics

... 2. Y-linked (holandric) Inheritance ......................................................................................... 3. Sex influenced inheritance .................................................................................................. 4. Sex limited inheritance .................. ...
Two Historical Perspectives - University of Hawaii at Hilo
Two Historical Perspectives - University of Hawaii at Hilo

... functionalists species are really related only to their adaptive niche; "Types" were just coincidences of those niches. For structuralists, species were really related to other species, via their common membership in Types. The real unities documented by structuralists were a necessary premise in Da ...
Genetically Essential and Nonessential a-Tubulin Genes Specify Functionally Interchangeable Proteins.
Genetically Essential and Nonessential a-Tubulin Genes Specify Functionally Interchangeable Proteins.

... copy of this gene. If the plasmid integrates by a single homologous recombination event at the locus of the gene of interest, the result is a disrupted gene which consists of two partial copies of the gene flanking the plasmid sequences containing the disruption marker. Two other common types of rec ...
Chapter 1
Chapter 1

... • It believes natural selection favours behaviours that increase organisms’ reproductive success and their ability to pass their genes on the next generation. ©2005 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. ...
10.1 - My Haiku
10.1 - My Haiku

... between pairs of alleles long before the details of meiosis were known. Where Mendel states that pairs of alleles of a gene separate independently during gamete production, we can now attribute this to random orientation of chromosomes during metaphase I. Mendel made this deduction when working with ...
Development, Adaptation, and Evolution
Development, Adaptation, and Evolution

... reoccurs regularly in nature. Development is predicable; it may even be programmed. Evolution is neither. At the same time that developmental biology went proximal, evolutionary theory sloughed off its developmental attachments. Transmission genetics abstracted away from developmental mechanism. Gen ...
Temperature-dependent expression of virulence genes in fish
Temperature-dependent expression of virulence genes in fish

... factors is unnecessary during the planktonic state but essential for the infection process. Switching between environmental and host niches is sensed by the cell as a group of variations in different parameters including temperature. In this way, bacteria save energy by not expressing virulence genes ...
Supplementary Figures (doc 928K)
Supplementary Figures (doc 928K)

... entities). Stacked percentage distribution of level 0 cluster sizes from the group of all sequences, divided by cluster specificity. The “specificity” of a cluster is determined by the number of sequences that belong to the CLL group or the non-CLL group. If all sequences are non-CLL then the cluste ...
Genetic, psychosocial, and demographic factors associated with
Genetic, psychosocial, and demographic factors associated with

... Seeking Scale for Children (SSSC; Russo et al. 1993). Participants endorse the choice that most describes what they like or feel, for example, “(a) I don’t like being around kids who act wild and crazy” or “(b) I enjoy being around kids who sometimes act wild and crazy.” Each response option that re ...
important update on the status of curly calf syndrome
important update on the status of curly calf syndrome

... We want to provide a thorough report to each of you as a result of the preliminary conclusions reached today by Dr. Jon Beever of the University of Illinois. While those conclusions are serious and should be taken seriously by all of us, they arrive against a backdrop of significant scientific advan ...
Sensory Pathways
Sensory Pathways

... and activates a receptor on the tongue that is also activated by heat. Thermoregulators, or animals that regulate their body temperature, have thermoreceptors in the brain that mediate a physiological or behavioral response to maintain temperature homeostasis. For example, in endotherms (animals tha ...
Mate choice evolution, dominance effects, and the
Mate choice evolution, dominance effects, and the

... 2000; Reinhold, 2002). To see why, consider a simplified genetic setting where condition is determined by only one locus, with two alleles A and a. In a traditional good-genes scenario, AA males are in best condition, followed by Aa and then aa. With a heterozygote advantage, Aa males perform best an ...
To clone or not to clone plant QTLs
To clone or not to clone plant QTLs

... involved in determining a quantitative trait (i.e. a trait influenced by both multiple genetic and environmental factors). Polygenes have been integrated into most quantitative genetics models; in many cases, these models successfully describe complex phenomena such as the inheritance of quantitativ ...
Campbell`s Biology: Concepts and Connections, 7e (Reece et al
Campbell`s Biology: Concepts and Connections, 7e (Reece et al

... 26) Which of the following statements regarding genetic testing is false? A) Genetic testing before birth requires the collection of fetal cells. B) Carrier testing helps determine if a person carries a potentially harmful disorder. C) The screening of newborns can catch inherited disorders right af ...
document
document

... Being a wizard or a muggle depends on genetics ...
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Biology and consumer behaviour

Consumer behaviour is the study of the motivations surrounding a purchase of a product or service. It has been linked to the field of psychology, sociology and economics in attempts to analyse when, why, where and how people purchase in the way that they do. However, little literature has considered the link between our consumption behaviour and the basics of our being, our biology. Segmentation by biological driven demographics such as sex and age are already popular and pervasive in marketing. As more knowledge and research is known, targeting based on a consumers biology is of growing interest and use to marketers.As human machines being made up of cells controlled by our brain to influence aspects of our behaviour, there must be some influence of biology on our consumer behaviour and how we purchase as well. The nature versus nurture debate is at the core of how much biology influences these buying decisions, because it argues the extent to which biological factors influence what we do, and how much is reflected through environmental factors. Neuromarketing is of interest to marketers in measuring the reaction of stimulus to marketing. Even though we know there is a reaction, the question of why we consume the way we do still lingers, but it is a step in the right direction. Biology helps to understand consumer behaviour as it influences consumption and aids in the measurement of it.Lawson and Wooliscroft (2004) drew the link between human nature and the marketing concept, not explicitly biology, where they considered the contrasting views of Hobbes and Rousseau on mankind. Hobbes believed man had a self-serving nature whereas Rousseau was more forgiving towards the nature of man, suggesting them to be noble and dignified. Hobbes saw the need for a governing intermediary to control this selfish nature which provided a basis for the exchange theory, and also links to Mcgregor’s Theory of X and Y, relevant to management literature. He also considered cooperation and competition, relevant to game theory as an explanation of man’s motives and can be used for understanding the exercising of power in marketing channels. Pinker outlines why the nature debate has been suppressed by the nurture debate in his book The Blank Slate.
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