Chapter 2 - Biological Beginnings Flashcards
What is natural selection?
The evolutionary process by which those individuals of a species that are best adapted are the ones that survive and reproduce
What is the evolutionary perspective?
Emphasizes the importance of adaptation, reproduction, and survival of the fittest in shaping behavior. In this sense of it refers to the ability to bear aspirin that’s what I have long enough to their offspring of their own
What are youse were proposed by evolutionary developmental psychologist?
- And extended childhood period Evolved because humans required time to develop a large brain and learn the complexity of human social societies
- Many psychological mechanisms our domain specific meaning we have to consider the immediate context and how development and biology are affected by that context
How does bandura evaluate evolutionary psychology?
Although Bandura acknowledges the important influences of evolution on human adaptation, he rejects one-sided evolutionism.
Bandura sees development as bidirectional -> We the species interact and change the environment and the environment interact and changes us as a species
Evolution gave us by structures and biological potentialities, not behavioural dictates
What are chromosomes?
- Threadlike structures made up of deoxyribonucleic acid(DNA).
- Has a double helix shape.
- It contains genetic information
What are genes?
- Units of hereditary information;
- direct cells to reproduce themselves into a simple proteins;
- proteins are the building blocks of cells and regulate the body processes;
- the activity of genes (genetic expression) is affected by their environment
How many chromosomes do we have in the human body cells?
All cells in the human body except for the sperm and egg have 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs
What is fertilization?
The process in which an egg and a sperm fuse to create a single cell called the zygote
What is meiosis?
The process by which cells in the reproductive organs (sperm and eggs) duplicate their chromosomes, then divide twice forming four cells each having half of the genetic material of the parent cell. By the end of meiosis each egg or sperm has 23 unpaired chromosomes
What is a mutated gene?
Permanently altered DNA segment
What is a genotype?
A persons genetic heritage; the actual genetic material.
What is a phenotype?
The way in individuals genotype is expressed in an observable and measurable characteristic
Provide an example of how environment alters genes?
Runners gene in Kenya
What are sex linked genes?
Most mutated genes are recessive, when a mutated gene is carried on the X chromosome, the result is called X linked inheritance
Haemophilia and fragile X syndrome or examples of excellent in Heritance disease
Where does opposition to stem cell research generally come from?
Ethical and moral issues