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Psychology 403: Topics in Evolutionary Psychology Dr. M.R. Snyder Evolutionary Psychology • The approach • Old application, new formalization Evolutionary Theories • Why/how do new organisms develop? • What drives change? Evolutionary Psychology • • • • Multidisciplinary approach About 20 years old as a formalized field Theoretical approach Cosimides & Toobey (1992) – “Evolutionary Psychology Manifesto” Evolutionary Theories Not New • Greeks – Heraclitus (6th C. BC) • State of flux – Aristotle (4th C. BC) • Development in prescribed direction • Medieval Europe – St. Thomas Aquinas (13th C) • Human/lower animal differences Eighteenth Century • George Leclerc, Comte de Buffon – Adaptations to fit environment pressures • Erasmus Darwin – Role of sexual reproduction • Jean de Lamarck – Inheritance of acquired characteristics • Georges Cuvier – Catastrophism Charles Darwin • • • • • • Provided causal mechanism Voyage of the Beagle (1831-1836) On the Origin of Species (1859) Variation, inheritance, selection Artificial, natural, sexual Differential reproductive success Social Darwinism • • • • Late 19th century to present Directed, purposeful Teleological Political, social agenda Sociobiology • E.O. Wilson • Systematic study of the biological basis of social behaviour Evolutionary Psychology Issues • Are humans unique animals? • Gradual or sudden development? • Modularity of mind, or general information processor? • Environment of Evolutionary Adaptiveness (EEA) Approaches • Evolutionary Psychology – Will the real EP please step forward? • Dual Inheritance Theory (DIT) • Human Behavioural Ecology (HBE) Terms and Concepts Genetics • Mendellian genetics – – – – – Gene, alleles Particulate inheritance Dominant or recessive Homozygous or heterozygous Genotype and phenotype • Polygenetic effects • Interaction between genes and environment Darwinian Selection • Adaptive, maladaptive, neutral • Success – Not number of offspring, but number of reproducing offspring • Gene, individual, or group as level of selection? Natural Selection • Survival value • Predator/prey, environment, parasitism, etc. • “Survival of the fittest” Sexual Selection • Intrasexual selection – Within a sex • Intersexual selection – Between sexes Genetic Diversity • • • • Heterozygosity Variability of offspring in the population Disease vector Sexual vs. asexual reproduction r Values • Genetic relatedness • Probability of having the same gene due to common ancestor • r = 1.0 – Self, identical twins • r = 0.5 – Parent and child, siblings • r =0.25 – Grandparent and grandchild Inclusive Fitness • William Hamilton • Classical (direct) and “indirect” fitness • Role of r values – rB>C – Phenotype and genotype How to be Successful • Increase classical fitness • Increase inclusive fitness • Quantity vs. quality tradeoff Male vs. Female Reproduction • Energy investment • Commonalities • Differences Adaptationist Approach Traits • An aspect of an organism’s phenotype • Physiological, behavioural Adaptations • Process by which evolution modifies and generates traits that effect the spread of some genes over others • The end product of the process; i.e., the traits selected by the evolutionary process Spandrels • Byproducts • Not all traits are directly selected for • These traits are linked to other traits that were adaptations Energy • • • • Finite Cost/benefit Energy budgets require trade-offs Expectation is that evolution selected for adaptations to energy budget that allows for maximization of fitness Identifying Adaptations • Traits show “special design” if they perform a specific function well, and • It is difficult to postulate an alternative evolutionary process that led to the trait except for selection for this function • Inferential Attractiveness as an Adaptation • Particular traits perceived as attractive by opposite sex • Benefits individuals’ reproductive fitness • Symons (1995): “Beauty is in the adaptations of the beholder.” Selection Benefits for Attractiveness • Genetic and resource benefits • Selection favoured those who possessed traits that predisposed them to mate with others who possessed traits that provided the benefits • Sexually selected traits Cross Cultural Value • Buss (1989) surveyed from 37 cultures world wide • Value of physical attractiveness rated highly • Industrial, first world • Traditional (e.g., Ache of Paraguay, Shiwiar of Equador, etc.) • Also, cross-cultural agreement on who is attractive Sexual Selection • A feedback system • One sex develops preference for trait • If it increases differential reproductive success, preference for trait spreads to offspring • Members of opposite sex that have the desired trait will also, therefore, spread the trait to their offspring Intrasexual Selection • Competition between members of the same sex • Usually, perceived as male-male – Polygynous mating systems • However, in humans both male and female intrasexual selection Intersexual Selection • Choice between the sexes • Sometimes called, “female choice” • Reproductive costs generally more expensive for females (limiting reproductive resource) Mutual Mate Choice • Seen in species where both sexes invest heavily in offspring • Both sexes are selected to display desired traits • Seen in humans across time and cultures Signaling Quality Traits • Traits that indicate something about an individual’s fitness • Honest signals are costly (Zahavi 1975) • “Handicap principle” • If you can afford the handicap, you must be of superior quality Sensory Bias • May be a bias towards some trait in sensory system • May have nothing to do with mate choice • However, may inadvertently influence mate selection • Genes for some trait may be “piggybacked” into gene pool due to genes for sensory bias