Title: Chapter One The Major Issues
1Chapter OneThe Major Issues
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
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2Biological Psychology
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
2 of 26
- Study of the physiological, evolutionary, and
developmental mechanisms of behavior and
experience - emphasis on the study of areas and sub-areas of
the brain - brain areas function depends on communication
among neurons, the building blocks of behavior - neuron activity somehow produces behavior and
experience
3Figure 1.1
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
3 of 26
- Figure 1.1 A dorsal view (from above) and a
ventral view (from below) of the human brain. The
brain has an enormous number of divisions and
subareas the labels point to a few of the main
ones that are visible from outside.
4Biological Explanations of Behavior
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
4 of 26
- Physiological relates a behavior to the activity
of the brain and other organs (area of brain
enables bird to sing) - Ontogenetic describes the development of the
structure or behavior (why genes and environment
both necessary for bird to sing) - Evolutionary examines a structure or a behavior
in terms of evolutionary history (two different
species of birds with similar songs have same
ancestor) - Functional describes why a structure or behavior
evolved as it did (singing improves birds
chances of mating)
5Mind-Body Problem
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
5 of 26
- Dualism mind and body are different kinds of
substances, that exist independently but somehow
interact - René Descartes proposed that mind and brain
interact in the pineal gland - Monism there is only one kind of existence
- materialism everything is material or physical
- mentalism only the mind exists
- identity mental processes are the same thing as
certain kinds of brain processes, but described
in different terms (e.g., fear is the same as the
accompanying pattern of neural activity in the
brain)
6Mind-Body Problem cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
6 of 26
- What is consciousness and how is it produced?
- Hard problem the question of why and how any
kind of brain activity is associated with
consciousness - Chalmers (1995) consciousness is a fundamental
property of matter and cannot be reduced further - Easy problems determining the difference between
wakefulness and sleep, or identifying brain
mechanisms that enable us to focus our attention - Dennet (1991, 1996) When we answer all of the
easy problems, the hard problem will go away
7Mind-Body Problem cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
7 of 26
- Research may not solve problem soon because
consciousness is not directly observable - I know that I am conscious but I can only infer
that you have conscious experience - solipsism the belief that only I exist
- Where and when does consciousness occur?
- do all animals have conscious experiences?
plants? rocks? - when does the human embryo experience
consciousness? - could we build a robot that experiences
consciousness?
8Genetics of Behavior
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
8 of 26
- Mendel (19th century) inheritance occurs through
genes - chromosomes are strands of genes, normally in
pairs - genes are units of heredity that maintain their
structural identity across generations - a genotype is an expression of a gene pair (e.g.,
BB, Bb, or bb) - Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
- when DNA exists as a double strand in a helix, it
makes up a chromosome - when DNA exists in a single strand, it serves as
a template for the synthesis of RNA
9Figure 1.6
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
9 of 26
- Figure 1.6 How DNA controls the development of
an organism. The sequence of bases along a strand
of DNA determines the order of bases along a
strand of RNA RNA in turn controls the sequence
of amino acids in a protein molecule.
10Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
10 of 26
- Genotype expression (Bbrown eyes bblue eyes)
- homozygous having an identical pair of genes on
two chromosomes (BB or bb) - heterozygous having an unmatched pair of genes
on two chromosomes (Bb) - dominant gene expressed in either the homozygous
or heterozygous condition (Bb or BB will be
expressed as brown eyes) - recessive gene only expressed in the homozygous
condition (bb is the only condition where blue
eyes will be expressed)
11Figure 1.7
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
11 of 26
- Figure 1.7 Four possible outcomes of a mating
between parents who are heterozygous for a given
gene (Tt). A child in this family has a 25
chance of being homozygous for the dominant gene
(TT), a 25 chance of being homozygous for the
recessive gene (tt), and a 50 chance of being
heterozygous (Tt).
12Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
12 of 26
- When genes are close together on the same
chromosome they are usually inherited together,
e.g., BC or bc - crossing over occurs during reproduction when a
pair of chromosomes exchange parts with each
other, e.g., BC and bc become Bc and bC - Sex-linked genes on X and Y chromosomes
- male (XY) has only one X chromosome and will
always express X-linked recessive genes (8 have
red-green color blindness) - female (XX) will express a recessive gene only if
it occurs on both of her X chromosomes (1 have
color blindness)
13Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
13 of 26
- Sex-limited genes
- present in both sexes but effect is limited or
almost limited to one sex (chest hair, breast
size) - genes expressed only after activation by sex
hormones - Sources of variation
- recombination some genes from two parents
combine to yield characteristics not found in
either parent - mutation a random change in a single gene
- crossing over creates unique characteristics not
found in either parent
14Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
14 of 26
- Heritability
- an estimate of how much of the variance in a
population characteristic is due to heredity
(ranges from 0 to 1) - if 0, heredity accounts for none of the observed
variations in that characteristic (e.g., in a
population with similar genes, most differences
are due to environment) - if 1, heredity accounts for all of the variations
in that characteristic (e.g., in identical
environments most differences are due to genes) - if 0.5, both components contribute
15Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
15 of 26
- How heritability is determined
- compare similarities in monozygotic twins versus
dizygotic twins - compare adopted children with their biological
and adoptive parents - findings support high heritability in many areas
but we may underestimate the effect of
environment and interaction between geneotype and
environment
16Genetics of Behavior cont.
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
16 of 26
- Can heritability be modified?
- PKU, caused by genetic inability to metabolize
phenylalanine, can be minimized with proper diet
17Figure 1.8
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
17 of 26
- Figure 1.8 Prenatal development of monozygotic
and dizygotic twins. In most cases, monozygotic
(identical) twins develop in a single placenta
and have the same blood supply. Dizygotic
(fraternal) twins develop in separate placentas.
Therefore, monozygotic twins have the sane
prenatal environment as well as the same genetic
inheritance, and dizygotic twins differ in both
respects.
18Evolution of Behavior
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
18 of 26
- Change over generations in the frequencies of
various genes in a population - Change occurs through mutations, recombinations
and any new genes that are successfully
reproduced - Artificial selection limits reproduction to
animals that possess a desired trait, ensuring
its survival
19Misunderstandings about Evolution
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
19 of 26
- Lamarckian evolution is mistaken belief that we
acquire characteristics through use and lose them
through disuse. - If survival of fittest no longer applies, has
evolution stopped? - no, reproduction, not survival is key
- Does evolution mean improvement?
- maybe your genes got you here but they may not
be advantageous tomorrow - Does evolution act to benefit the individual or
the species? - neither it acts to spread the genes
20Sociobiology/Evolutionary Psychology
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
20 of 26
- Seeks functional explanations for why a behavior
is useful and is favored by natural selection - why some animals have better color or peripheral
vision - why we cycle through stages of sleep
- why mammals and birds use most of their energy to
stay warm - why different species have different eating
habits - why people die at different rates
- why more men than women enjoy casual sex with
multiple partners
21Sociobiology/Evolutionary Psychology cont
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
21 of 26
- How does sociobiology explain altruistic
behavior? - a gene that encourages altruism would help others
survive to reproduce - humans exhibit altruism but uncommon in
non-humans - reciprocal altruism and kin selection may help
spread gene - Sociobiology can be criticized when practitioners
assume that a behavior is adaptive and then
propose an explanation without testing it
22Reasons for Animal Research
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
22 of 26
- Underlying mechanisms of behavior are similar
across species and sometimes a nonhuman species
is easier to study - We are interested in animals for their own sake
- Learning about animals sheds light on human
evolution - Legal or ethical restrictions prevent the use of
human participants in certain experiments
23Figure 1.12
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
23 of 26
- Figure 1.12 Brains of several species. The
general plan and organization of the brain are
similar for all mammals, even though brain size
varies from species to species.
24The Ethical Debate on Animal Research
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
24 of 26
- Some experiments subject animals to brain damage,
electrode implantation, injections for drugs or
hormones - Minimalists agree that some animal research is
acceptable, but wish to minimize it - Abolitionists want all research on animals to
stop - Principles of moderation and compromise are now
the legal standard in the US
25Careers in Biological Psychology for
Psychologists (PhDs)
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
25 of 26
- Behavioral neuroscientist investigates how
functioning of the brain and other organisms
affect behavior - Neuroscientist studies anatomy, biochemistry,
and physiology of the nervous system - Neuropsychologist conducts behavioral tests to
determine what brain damaged people can and
cannot do - Psychophysiologist measures heart rate,
breathing rate brain waves, and other body
processes that change as a function of peoples
activities and information processing
26Careers in Biological Psychology for Physicians
(MDs)
James W. Kalat
Biological Psychology, 8th Edition
Chapter 1 The Major Issues
26 of 26
- Neurologist treats people with brain damage or
diseases of the brain - Neurosurgeon performs brain surgery
- Psychiatrist helps people with emotional
distress or troublesome behaviors, sometimes
using drugs or other medical procedures