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Psychology
Schizophrenia
Biological Explanations for Schizophrenia
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Janae Santana
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Cards (56)
What is one biological explanation for schizophrenia (SZ)?
It is passed on through
genes
.
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What does it mean that schizophrenia (SZ) is polygenic?
A
number
of
genes
have been implicated in its development.
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What does it mean that SZ is aetiologically heterogenous?
Different studies have identified different
candidate genes
.
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How many genetic variations did Ripke et al find associated with increased risk of SZ?
108
separate genetic variations.
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What have family studies established about the occurrence of SZ?
SZ is more common among
biological
relatives of a person with SZ.
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What is the concordance rate for children with two schizophrenic parents according to Gottesman and Shields?
46%
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What is the concordance rate for siblings of individuals with SZ?
9%
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What is the chance of developing SZ if an identical twin of one parent has SZ?
17%
chance.
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What does the family study data suggest about the influence of genes over nurture?
It shows a
significant
influence of genes.
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What does it suggest if MZ twins are more concordant than DZ twins?
It suggests that greater similarity is due to
genetic factors
.
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What were the concordance rates found by Gottesman and Shields for MZ and DZ twins?
42%
for MZ twins and
9%
for DZ twins.
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Why is the concordance rate for MZ twins not 100%?
It suggests that
other
factors
must also be
involved.
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What is one explanation for why two-thirds of people with SZ have no relatives with a similar diagnosis?
It may be due to mutations in parental DNA.
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What is the purpose of adoption studies in the context of SZ?
To disentangle
genetic
and
environmental
influences.
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What percentage of adoptees whose biological mothers had SZ received a diagnosis of SZ according to Tienari et al?
7%
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What did Tienari et al conclude from their findings?
That the genetic liability to
SZ
had been decisively confirmed.
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What assumption is made in all twin studies regarding MZ and DZ twins?
That their environments are
equivalent
.
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What does Joseph argue about the treatment of MZ and DZ twins?
MZ
twins
are
treated
more
similarly
than
DZ
twins.
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What does Joseph suggest about the differences in concordance rates between MZ and DZ twins?
They reflect
environmental
differences rather than
genetic
differences.
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What does the fact that concordance rates are not 100% imply about SZ?
It
cannot
be a wholly
genetic
disorder.
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What does the predisposition theory suggest about SZ?
Genes
alone do not cause SZ but predispose individuals to it.
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What is a limitation of focusing solely on biological factors in explaining SZ?
It ignores the role of
psychological
factors.
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What does research on twins with identical genes show about concordance rates?
They are far from
100%
.
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What is likely to explain why one twin develops SZ and the other does not?
Psychological
factors rather than biological ones.
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What is the definition of neural correlates?
Patterns of
cortical activity
or neural structures that coincide with specific
psychological symptoms
.
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What does the original dopamine hypothesis suggest?
Hyperdopaminergia in the
subcortex
is responsible for
SZ
.
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What does the modern understanding of the dopamine hypothesis suggest?
Both
hyper-
and
hypodopaminergia
in different brain areas contribute to
SZ
.
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What is hyperdopaminergia associated with?
Positive symptoms of
SZ
.
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Where is hyperdopaminergia specifically noted to occur?
In the
frontal lobe
, particularly
Broca's area
.
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What symptoms may result from hyperdopaminergia in Broca's area?
Auditory hallucinations
.
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What is hypodopaminergia associated with?
Negative symptoms of
SZ
.
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Where did Rakic et al suggest hypodopaminergia occurs?
In the
prefrontal cortex
.
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What negative symptoms may result from hypodopaminergia in the prefrontal cortex?
Speech poverty
and
avolition
.
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What are the implications of the dopamine hypothesis for drug treatments?
It informs the development of
antipsychotics
/
dopamine antagonists
.
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What is the role of the ventral striatum?
It evaluates
reward values
, predictability, and risks.
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What did Juckel et al suggest about the ventral striatum?
Low
activation levels
may be associated with
avolition
.
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What did Allen et al conclude about the anterior cingulate and left temporal cortex?
They are associated with
functional abnormalities
in
auditory verbal hallucinations
.
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What was the method used by Allen et al in their study?
fMRI
to record brain activity during
auditory hallucinations
.
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What does supporting evidence for the dopamine hypothesis come from?
The success of
drug treatments
that alter dopamine
activity
.
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What is the basic mechanism of antipsychotic drugs?
To reduce the effects of
dopamine
.
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See all 56 cards
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