Biological Approach Flashcards
What is biological psychology?
Understanding human behaviour at a cellular and structural level on the assumption that the cause is biological being due to nature.
What does the biological approach assume about behaviour?
That it is inherited through genes and has an evolutionary function.
Give an example of how behaviour is an evolutionary function.
- Levels of testosterone in men decrease in the weeks after childbirth
- Testosterone deprived men are less likely to leave in search of new mates to inseminate.
Define ‘trepanning’.
Drilling holes into the skull to treat problems with the brain (e.g. treating migraines).
What did Descartes (1596) propose?
That there is a difference between animals and humans, and that the difference was that humans had souls.
Define ‘monism’.
That the mind and body are one thing.
Define ‘dualism’.
That the mind and body are separate but can interact.
Define ‘phrenology’.
Mapping out the bumps on a person’s skull to deduce aspects of their personality.
Describe Darwin’s ideas on natural selection.
If alterations in a gene helped people to survive, then the gene would be passed on.
What did Hippocrates put forward?
The idea that each side of the brain serves a distinct function.
What did Paul Broca’s (1861) research suggest?
He examined a man unable to talk coherently because of a head injury and a post-mortem showed that he had damage to an area of his brain showing localised function.
List a brief timeline of the history of methods used in biological psychology.
- 4th Century BC = Trepanning + Hipocrates
- 16th Century = Descartes (1596)
- 18th Century = Phrenology
- 19th Century = Darwin + Broca
- 21st Century = Brain scans
What is a weakness of using brain scanning to research problems with the brain.
It may overemphasise the importance of one area.
Briefly describe the role of the central nervous system in determining behaviour.
The CNS is made up of neurons that send messages around the body that can shape our behaviour.
Briefly describe the role of brain function in behaviour.
The brain receives input through neurons from each senses and sends an output to the rest of our body.