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Access Psychology Tutor: Hannah Butler [email protected] Before we begin • Register • Essay title verification • Moodle training • Any questions/comments? What will we learn today? • The Biological approach to Psychology • Nature versus nurture • Brain structure and functions The Biological approach to Psychology • The biological perspective is a way of looking at psychological topics by studying the physical basis for animal and human behaviour. • It is one of the major perspectives in psychology, and involves such things as studying the immune system, nervous system and genetics. • This field of psychology is often referred to as biopsychology or physiological psychology. • The biological perspective is relevant to the study of psychology in three ways: • 1. Comparative method: different species of animal can be studied and compared. • This can help in the search to understand human behaviour. • 2. Physiology: how the nervous system and hormones work, how the brain functions, how changes in structure and/or function can affect behaviour. • For example, we could ask how prescribed drugs to treat depression affect behaviour through their interaction with the nervous system. • 3. Investigation of inheritance: what an animal inherits from its parents, mechanisms of inheritance (genetics). • For example, we might want to know whether high intelligence is inherited from one generation to the next. • Each of these biological aspects, the comparative, the physiological and the genetic, can help explain human behaviour. Basic assumptions • Psychology should be seen as a science, to be studied in a scientific manner (usually in a laboratory). • Behaviour can be largely explained in terms of biology (e.g. genes/hormones). • Human genes have evolved over millions of years to adapt behaviour to the environment. Therefore, most behaviour will have an adaptive / evolutionary purpose. Nature versus nurture The nature versus nurture debate is one of the oldest issues in psychology. • This debate is about how much a person’s life is determined by their inherited genetics (their 'nature') and how much is determined by the environment they grow up in ('nurture'). • Nurture is the effect the people in your life had on you growing up. An example would be the values your parents taught you. • Nature is the genetics you received, like eye colour. • Read ‘nature versus nurture handout’ • Highlight key information • Complete ‘nature versus nurture worksheet’ What do you think??? • For example, when a person achieves tremendous academic success, did they do so because they are genetically predisposed to be successful or is it a result of an enriched environment? • What about homosexuality? • What about serial killers? Brain structure and functions • Class reading • Complete the ‘brain structure and functions’ work sheet Homework • Research and summarise the following studies: • Kaplan & Woodside (1987) • Strober & Katz (1987 • Askevold & Heiberg • Hollander et al (1984)