Casey's study Flashcards

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1
Q

What was the aim of Casey’s study?

A

To find out whether people who had difficulties delaying gratification at the age of 4 would still have difficulties 40 years later

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2
Q

What was the sample of Casey’s study?

A

For age 40 - 59 44 year olds - 27 low delayers and 32 high delayers

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3
Q

What were the four tasks in Casey’s study?

A

‘Cool’ tasks - neutral female and male faces
- female go - male no-go
- Male go - Female no-go
‘Hot’ tasks - happy and fearful faces
-Happy go - fearful no-go
- Fearful go - Happy no-go

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4
Q

What did participants have to do in Casey’s study?

A

press the button on the ‘Go’ parts of the tasks , but hold back for the ‘no-go’ parts.

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5
Q

Why were happy faces chosen to test delayed gratification?

A

studies have show that the adult human brain finds happy faces alluring

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6
Q

Who were the high delayers and the low delayers?

A

high delayers - able to delay gratification in the Marshmallow test at the age of 4
low delayers - not been good at delaying gratification at the age of four

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7
Q

What was the marshmallow test?

A

Mischel - children told they could eat one marshmallow now, or wait for about 15 minutes and have two
Sample of 4 year olds in the 1960s - over 500

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8
Q

What were the behavioural findings of Casey’s study?

A

Cold tasks - high and low delayers showed no difference
Hot task - low delayers made more errors - but not statistically significant (p = 0.11)
High delayers made similar numbers of errors on both tasks
Low delayers made significantly more errors on the hot task than they did the cool task (P=0.005)

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9
Q

What was the aim of Casey’s Neurobiological part of the study?

A

Casey wanted to see if there is a brain-based explanation for the ability to delay gratification

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10
Q

What was the sample of Casey’s Neurobiological study?

A

Of the 59 participants from the first study, 27 took part in the second. 11 low delayers and 15 high delayers

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11
Q

What was the procedure of the Neurobiological part of casey’s study?

A

Participants repeated the Go-NO-Go task, this time they did it whilst inside an fMRI scanner

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12
Q

What were the neurobiological findings of Casey’s study?

A

when low delayers saw the happy faces they had less activity than the high-delayers in their inferior frontal gyrus (involved in regulating our behaviour) and had more activity in their ventral striatum (part of the limbic system and associated with rewards)

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13
Q

What did Casey conclude about the neurobiological findings?

A

Differences between people in their ability to show self-control and delay gratification can be related to neurobiological differences

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14
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the nature-nurture debate?

A

Nature - predominantly - Shows a stability in ability or inability to resits temptation over time
Nurture - By the age of 4, you could have learnt how to resist temptation from your environment - possible to develop inventions to help resist temptation - such as cooling strategies

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15
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the free-will - determinism debate?

A

Determinism - biological - because differences in brain activity mean some can more easily resist temptation than others
free-will - if we can choose strategies like cooling techniques to help us resist temptation

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16
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the Individual-situational debate?

A

Individual - predominantly - Internal physiological difference that a person’s ability to resist temptation
Situational - Could have been influences before the age of 4 - we don’t know

17
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the social sensitivity debate?

A

labelling people as low delayers - suggests they have reduced life chances - biological characteristic which is difficult to change as it is a stable trait
However, there are things you can teach people to help - cooling techniques

18
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the reductionism-holism debate?

A

Reductionist - predominantly - only look at a articular aspect of the brain - reducing a complex behaviour to that scenario and to those areas of the brain - no environmental factors

19
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the biological area?

A

Looks at physiological explanations for behaviour - specific areas of the brain that affect our ability to resist temptation

20
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to Ethnocentrism?

A

Only in the US - a capitalist society - but biological so could be species specific

21
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to the psychology as a science debate?

A

Controlled lab experiment - objective, falsifiable
But not replicable as it is longitudinal?

22
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to relaibility?

A

Internal - Not really replicable as it is longitudinal - many also did the first experiment at home - but was very controlled
External - Reduction of sample size - from 562 to 26

23
Q

How does Casey’s study relate to validity?

A

Population - an issue as only 4 female low delayers in final sample
Ecological - Go/no-go tasks not a way of resisting temptation in the real world - in fMRI scanner

24
Q

What are two similarities between Sperry and Casey’s studies?

A

controlled lab based experiments - use of tachistoscope and objective MRI
Difficult to replicate either - commissurotomies not done often - long longitudinal study

25
Q

What are two differences between Sperry and Casey’s studies?

A

length of time - Snapshot vs longitudinal
Generalisability of sample - typical participants vs all A-typical

26
Q

How did Casey’s study change our understanding of regions of the brain?

A

Tells us about other areas of the brain than just corpus callosum
Casey looks at inferior frontal Gurus and ventral striatum
Looks at other ways to research brain areas - using fMRI

27
Q

How didn’t Casey’s study change our understanding of regions of the brain?

A

Both still lacked ecological validity - we don’t know about the regions of the brain in real life settings

28
Q

How did Casey’s study change our understanding of Individual diversity?

A

Casey shows there are individual consistent stable traits in a typical sample