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PowerPoint Presentation - Ch.14 Mendel and the Gene Idea
PowerPoint Presentation - Ch.14 Mendel and the Gene Idea

... • One gene has an effect on another. C leads to deposition of color while B or b leads to color BBcc would be white even though the genes code for black color. ...
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Separated Twins

... Chromosomes, Genes, and DNA • Genes carried by chromosomes are the units of inheritance that are sequences of DNA • The sequence of bases along a strand constitutes the genetic code – The genetic code gives instructions to perform a specific function in the body (i.e. release this protein or that h ...
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Evolution of Development (EvoDevo) •Development is the process

... (with the exception of gametes, which only have half the DNA, and certain cells in the immune system, where the immune genes have been scrambled to create new diversity). If the genes in each cell are the same, how, then, do different parts of our body look become so plainly different? ...
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... • Y-linked genes are found on the Y chromosome, symbolized by X, YR, Yr • Thomas Morgan experimented with the eye color of fruit flies (Drosophilia) to determine Xlinkage ...
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biology quiz chapter 12

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arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy

... the predominant mode of transmission is autosomal dominant, except in the case of Naxos disease where palmoplantar keratosis and unusual wooly hair are also present due to recessive mutations in the JUP and PKP2 genes. Currently, a genetic defect can be confirmed in approximately 40% of cases and tw ...
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... Lethal genes are ones that cause death in the individual. The lethal gene may be dominant or recessive. In the heterozygous individual there may be some observed difference, e.g. Manx (tailless) cats. Even when dominant the lethal gene may be passed on if it does not have onset until after reproduct ...
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... trait that is either present in the organism, or it isn’t. It can’t be obtained. In artificial selection, something other than the environment (usually humans) select in organisms (usually plants or animals) which traits are desirable, and mate two organisms for a specific desired result. ...
Introduction to Psychology
Introduction to Psychology

... Subtle chemical signals, or pheromones, have long been known to draw pairs together within the same species, and for a specific reason. In mice, for example, experiments showed that pheromones acted as attractants between males and females who were genetically similar except that they differed in a ...
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Genes “R” Us - University of Minnesota

... much harder to rationalize as given by nature when one views identity as equally shaped by a complex context of an organism’s social and ethnic environment. Highlighting genetic differences at the group level also eclipses thinking about differences within groups. Unwarranted stereotypes easily subs ...
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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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