chapter 9- exam 2 Flashcards
1
Q
eipigentics
A
- nongenetic influences on a gene’s expression (stress, nutrition)
2
Q
behavioral genetics
A
- explains how personality traits are passed from parent to child and shared biological relative
- examines how genes influence broad patterns of behavior or persoanlity
3
Q
calculating heritabilities
A
- examine how phenotypes may be attributed to variations in genotypes
- compares similarity in personality between people who are and are not related and people who are related to different degrees
- the assumption is that traits and behaviors influenced by genes should be more similar among more closely related people
- heritability coefficient is the degree to which genes account for something
- from non twin relative studies is approximately .20
4
Q
What does heritability tell you?
A
- genes matter: not all of personality comes from experience
- etiology or origin of disorders
- disorders with very low heritabilities are likely to be due to environmental factos
5
Q
how genes affect personality
A
- genes are not causal, they only provide the design
- create propensities to behave in certain ways
- examine gene-environment interaction
6
Q
mate selection
A
- heterosexual
- men place higher value on physical attraction and prefer younger mate
- women place higher value on economic security and prefer older mate
- both want the highest likelihood of healthy offspring who will survive and reproduce
- complications
- beauty standards today; liking someone; women also want hot men; homosexuality and asexuality
7
Q
mating strategies
A
- differences in mating strategies between men and women
- desired number of sexual partners, faithfulness to partner, selectivity of partners
- jealousy
- women = emotional infedility
- men = sexual infedelity
- sexy son hypothesis
- they will have very attractive son, so then the son will be able to easily pass genes
8
Q
sociosexuality
A
willingness to engage in sexual relations in the absence of a serious relationship
9
Q
evolutionary psychology
A
why are we so similar?
10
Q
gene environment ineraction
A
- choice of environment tends to be consistent with genetic tendencies
- the same environment can affect people differently
- environments can determine how or whether a gene is expressed
- environments can affect heritability
- ex: nutrition and height
11
Q
evolution and behavior
A
- current behaviors are present because these behaviors were helpful or necessary for survival
- people with these behavior survived and were able to pass on their genes to future generations
- identify common behavior patterns and then determine how the behavior was adaptive
- aggression and alturism
- to increase protection
- self esteem
- depression
- pain signals something is wrong and must be fixed
- crying may be a way to get social support
12
Q
Sociometer
A
Reflection of degree of acceptance by others
13
Q
individual differences
A
- focus has been general human nature
- evolutionary reasons for individual differences
- diversity is necessary for viability
- behavioral patterns evolved as reactions to particular environment experiences
- several possible behavioral strategies envolved
- some behaviors may be frequency dependent
- human nature is flexible
14
Q
biological reductionism
A
- everything about the mind can be reduced to biology
- we do not known enough about biology
- biology leaves out most of psychology and does not ask many important psychological questions