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Which is more important? What determines most of our behavior? Our genes? Or our environment? Heredity versus the environment NATURE VS. NURTURE Universal people communicate both verbally and nonverbally enforce rules of etiquette They avoid incest, fear snakes, and exchange gifts. Universal people demonstrate modesty in sexual behavior and bodily functions, even if they don’t wear clothes. Everywhere labor is divided by age and by gender. Men are more aggressive than women; women provide more child care. Every culture has tools Everywhere, people form beliefs about death and disease, they plan for the future. All cultures have taboos, including tabooed utterances. Sanctions exist for crimes against society, and mechanisms for dealing with theft, murder, and rape are universal. People everywhere recognize marriage They mimic, flirt, envy, empathize, joke, and tease They dance and make music GENES: OUR CODES FOR LIFE Chromosome DNA (deoxyribonucleic Genes acid) BLUE EYES? TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS Identical Fraternal twins twins TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES IDENTICAL VERSUS FRATERNAL TWINS TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES SEPARATED TWINS U of MN studies on identical twins separated at birth- two Jims (hobbies, habits, dog’s name, son’s name) Gerald Work Like Levey and Mark Newman, both: as volunteer firefighters the same beer (Budweiser) Are attracted to the same kinds of women Gerald worked in forestry, Mark worked for the city trimming trees (planned to go to school for forestry) Both liked to hunt, fish, watch John Wayne movies and eat Chinese food Both grew the same sideburns and mustaches Used the same speaking inflections and hand gestures Can you find a twin in this class? Anecdotal “Virtual evidence twins” TWIN AND ADOPTION STUDIES BIOLOGICAL VERSUS ADOPTIVE RELATIVES Genetic relatives Environmental Children relatives in the same family Are adopted children more like their biological parents or adoptive parents? Well, it depends. Their personality traits (how outgoing they are, how friendly, their overall temperament) were much more similar to their biological parents. Environmental factors have almost no impact on your personality Do parents even matter? Parents influence: Attitudes (such as toward education) Values Manners Faith Politics Less credit, less blame HERITABILITY Heritability “difference among people” How much of the variation among people can be attributed to genes IQ: .22 at age 5, .54 - . 62 at old age Interests (art, science etc.) .36 Psychiatric illnesses: Schizophrenia (.80), alcoholism (.50 to .60) Religiousness: .11 to .22 HERITABILITY OF VARIOUS TRAITS HERITABILITY GROUP DIFFERENCES Heritable differences between individuals does not imply heritable group differences HERITABILITY NATURE AND NURTURE Influence of adaptation Nature and nurture work together Genes are self-regulating They react to the environment GENE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION Genes and experience interact Evocative Mom interactions likes you better! NATURAL SELECTION AND ADAPTATION Evolutionary Natural psychology selection Mutation Adaptation Fitness EVOLUTIONARY SUCCESS HELPS EXPLAIN SIMILARITIES Behaviors that contribute to survival are found throughout cultures Why are children often afraid of the dark? EVOLUTIONARY SUCCESS HELPS EXPLAIN SIMILARITIES OUTDATED TENDENCIES Genetic traits which helped our ancestors survive may harm us today EXPERIENCE AND FACULTIES Repeated experiences modify neural tissue. We can change our brains! When is the brain’s plasticity highest? • Pruning Courtesy of C. Brune BRAIN DEVELOPMENT AND ADULTHOOD Brain development does not stop when we reach adulthood. Throughout our life, brain tissue continues to grow and change. A well-learned finger-tapping task leads to more motor cortical neurons (right) than baseline. PEER INFLUENCE In many ways, peers play a larger role than parents in shaping our behavior. What causes people to start smoking? Like a certain type of music? Wear certain clothes? Talk the way they talk? Ole Graf/ zefa/ Corbis AN EVOLUTIONARY EXPLANATION OF HUMAN SEXUALITY NATURAL SELECTION AND MATING PREFERENCES Differing preferences in partners Male preferences Female preferences Men tend to look for: Physical attractiveness and a youthful appearance A man’s ideal women would look like… Women tend to look for: Maturity, dominance, status/affluence, and boldness So a woman’s ideal man would look like… Characteristics Preferred by Males 1. Kindness and understanding 2. Intelligence 3. Physical attractiveness 4. Exciting personality 5. Good health 6. Adaptability 7. Creativity 8. Desire for children 9. College graduate 10. Good heredity 11. Good earning capacity 12. Good housekeeper 13. Religious orientation Characteristics Preferred by Females 1. Kindness and understanding 2. Intelligence 3. Exciting personality 4. Good health 5. Adaptability 6. Physical attractiveness 7. Creativity 8. Good earning capacity 9. College graduate 10. Desire for children 11. Good heredity 12. Good housekeeper 13. Religious orientation CRITIQUING THE EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE Backward Impact theorizing of social influence CULTURAL INFLUENCES Humans have the ability to evolve culture. Culture is composed of behaviors, ideas, attitudes, values and traditions shared by a group. VARIATION ACROSS CULTURE Cultures differ. Each culture develops norms – rules for accepted and expected behavior. Men holding hands in Saudi Arabia is the norm (closer personal space), but not in American culture. Jason Reed/ Reuters/Corbis VARIATION OVER TIME Cultures change over time. The rate of this change may be extremely fast. In many Western countries, culture has rapidly changed over the past 40 years or so. This change cannot be attributed to changes in the human gene pool because genes evolve very slowly. CULTURE AND THE SELF If a culture nurtures an individual’s personal identity, it is said to be individualist, but if a group identity is favored then the culture is described as collectivist. can benefit groups who experience disasters such as the 2005 earthquake in Pakistan. Kyodo News A collectivist support system GENDER DIFFERENCES IN AGGRESSION Men express themselves and behave in more aggressive ways than do women. This aggression gender gap appears in many cultures and at various ages. In males, the nature of this aggression is physical. In the U.S. the male to female arrest rate is 9 to 1. Men are more likely to support war as a solution to international problems GENDER AND SOCIAL POWER In most societies, men are socially dominant and are perceived as such. In 2005, men accounted for 84% of the governing parliaments. GENDER DIFFERENCES AND CONNECTEDNESS Young and old, women form more connections (friendships) with people than do men. Men emphasize freedom and self-reliance. Dex Image/ Getty Images Oliver Eltinger/ Zefa/ Corbis THE NEW FRONTIER: MOLECULAR GENETICS Molecular genetics Molecular behavior genetics Genetics and diseases Genetics and ethics THE END DEFINITIO N SLIDES = the study of the relative power and limits of genetic and environmental influences on behavior. BEHAVIOR GENETICS = every non-genetic influence, from prenatal nutrition to the people and things around us. ENVIRONMENT = threadlike structures made of DNA molecules that contain the genes. CHROMOSOMES = a complex molecule containing the genetic information that makes up the chromosomes. DNA (DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID) = the biochemical units of heredity that make up the chromosomes; segments of DNA capable of synthesizing a protein. GENES = the complete instructions for making an organism, consisting of all the genetic material in that organism’s chromosomes. GENOME = twins who develop from a single fertilized egg that splits in two, creating two genetically identical organisms. IDENTICAL TWINS = twins who develop from separate fertilized eggs. They are genetically no closer than brothers and sisters, but they share a fetal environment. FRATERNAL TWINS = the proportion of variation among individuals that we can attribute to genes. The heritability of a trait may vary, depending on the range of populations and environments studied. HERITABILITY = the interplay that occurs when the effect of one factor (such as environment) depends on another factor (such as heredity). INTERACTION = the subfield of biology that studies the molecular structure and function of genes. MOLECULAR GENETICS = the study of the evolution of behavior and the mind,using principles of natural selection. EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY = the principle that, among the range of inherited trait variations, those that lead to increased reproduction and survival will most likely be passed on to succeeding generations. NATURAL SELECTION = the random error in gene replication that leads to a change. MUTATION