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IB Psychology HL - BLOA - To What Extent Does Genetic Inheritance Influence Behaviour?

Psychology14 CardsCreated about 1 month ago

Genetic inheritance plays a substantial role in influencing aggression, though it interacts with environmental factors. Twin and adoption studies show that ≈ 50% of the variance in aggressive behaviour is attributable to genetic factors.

aggression

  • behaviour causing pain/harm in others

  • labeled as aggression only when the behaviour is intended to cause harm

a doctor giving an injection causes pain but the act isn’t aggressive as his intention isn’t to harm the individual

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

aggression

  • behaviour causing pain/harm in others

  • labeled as aggression only when the behaviour is intended to cause harm

<...

genetic inheritance and aggression

  • animal studies have shown clear link between aggression and genetic inheritance

Cited studies:

...

Bock and Goode (1996) - Aim

investigate effects of serotonin on aggression

Bock and Goode (1996) - Process

2 conditions:

  • serotonin inhibited

  • control

  • low serotonin levels are correlated with aggression

  • <...

Bock and Goode (1996) - Findings

serotonin-inhibited mice reared without aggressive role models still showed aggressive behaviour

Bock and Goode (1996) - Conclusion

aggression can be correlated with genetics

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TermDefinition

aggression

  • behaviour causing pain/harm in others

  • labeled as aggression only when the behaviour is intended to cause harm

a doctor giving an injection causes pain but the act isn’t aggressive as his intention isn’t to harm the individual

genetic inheritance and aggression

  • animal studies have shown clear link between aggression and genetic inheritance

Cited studies:

  • Bock and Goode (1996)

  • Suomi and Lesch (2002)

Bock and Goode (1996) - Aim

investigate effects of serotonin on aggression

Bock and Goode (1996) - Process

2 conditions:

  • serotonin inhibited

  • control

  • low serotonin levels are correlated with aggression

  • mice in the first condition had their serotonin receptor sites genetically manipulated via breeding

  • by having the gene responsible for producing serotonin receptor proteins removed

  • aggression was measured by the amount of bites/attacks

Bock and Goode (1996) - Findings

serotonin-inhibited mice reared without aggressive role models still showed aggressive behaviour

Bock and Goode (1996) - Conclusion

aggression can be correlated with genetics

Bock and Goode (1996) - Evaluation

  • tightly controlled

  • quantifiable and clear IV/DV

  • ethical guidelines for treatment of animals followed

  • as animals were bred for experimental purposes

Suomi and Lesch (2002)

  • identified a gene that affects effectiveness of processing serotonin

  • cerebral spinal fluid of 132 juvenile rhesus monkeys was collected

  • analysed for serotonin metabolite traces (high metabolite level = high efficiency of serotonin processing)

  • monkeys that had low metabolite levels were more aggressive

extent of influence of inheritance on behaviour

  • animal studies have shown clear link between aggression and genetic inheritance

  • but it’s reductionist and simplistic to assume genes are solely responsible for complex behaviour

  • aggression is a complex human behaviour

  • unlikely to be the result of one genetic trait

  • more likely the result of a combination of environmental and genetic factors

  • factors in the environment (e.g. parenting) must always be considered

cited studies:

  • Suomi (2002)

  • Caspie and Moffitt (2012)

Suomi (2002)

  • noted that bullies came from stern mothers while neurotics came from shy mothers

  • he took neurotic babies (babies that had nervous dispositions) from neurotic mothers

  • gave them to nurturing mothers (supermoms)

  • when raised by supermoms, the babies turned out very close to normal

  • shows that environment has a clear impact on behaviour

Caspi and Moffitt (2012)

  • conducted 26 year longitudinal study

  • involved 1036 children born in 1972 NZ

  • children inheriting a short version of the gene MAOA were more likely to exhibit aggression

  • but this was only in cases where the children experienced an abusive upbringing

  • carriers of MAOA who experienced good parenting were usually normal

evaluation of gene research (strengths vs weaknesses)

Strengths:
- helps us determine the effect of particular genes on behaviour

Weaknesses:

  • genes interact with the environment in complex ways

  • knowledge about genes is still limited

evaluation of animal studies (strengths vs weaknesses)

Strengths:

  • animal studies allow high levels of manipulation that would not be allowed on humans

  • findings help us understand biological mechanisms

Weaknesses:
- caution should be used when generalizing findings
of animal studies to humans

what to write when asked: “to what extent does genetic inheritance influence behaviour?”

  • define aggression

  • describe + explain the link between genes and aggression – Bock and Goode (1996), Suomi and Lesch (2002)

  • investigate alternate factor (effect of environment on behaviour) – Suomi (2002), Caspie and Moffitt (2012)

  • evaluate studies mentioned

  • discuss the ecological validity of genetic research

  • weigh benefits and limitations of using genetic research to understand behaviour

  • when stating opinions, mention empirical evidence

  • form a clear conclusion by discussing the relative importance of genes vs environment on behaviour