Nature & nurture

Cards (15)

  • What is nature ?
    Behaviour is a product of of innate+ inherited biological or genetic factors
    • We are predisposed to certain outcomes and some behaviour is pre programmed
  • What is nurture ?
    Behaviour is the product of the environment
    • born as a blank slate which our learning and environment write
    • accepts that humans have biological reflexes and need to mature into certain stages (puberty)
  • What is heredity ?
    Process whereby traits are passed on from parents to their offspring usually referring to genetic inheritance
    • assessed through concordance
  • Nature and nurture ?
    both approaches are scientific and cannot be tested independently as they are always interacting.
    • interactionist approach
    • diathesis - stress model
  • Interactionist approach ?
    Nature created nurture and allows them to interact
    • belsky and Rovin - found a child temperment is innate, this combines with reciprocity will influence the way a parent responds to them, further shaping their behaviour
  • Diathesis stress model ?
    • model suggest we have a biological vulnerability to an illness which is expressed when an environment stressor is triggered
    • genes in one person don’t always result in the outcome it depends on their experience
  • epigenetic inheritance ?
    • a change in our genetic activity and phenotype without a change in our genetic code
    • our lifestyle can influence these changes e.g smoking, nutrition
  • What did Dias + ressler find ?
    Mice can inherit fears
    • conditioned to fear the smell of cherry blossom through given electric shocks
    • offspring who never experienced this smell showed increases sensitivity when introduced to the smell
  • examples of nature ?
    • evolution
    • genetic explanation
  • Examples of nurture ?
    • social learning. Theory
    • behaviourism
  • Example of diathesis stress model
    Schzophrenia adoption studies.
  • Evaluation ?
    Deterministic
    reductionist
    practical application
  • deterministic. ?
    • both views assume we are predetermined to develop behaviours from birth and ignore free will
  • Reductionist ?

    assumes all behaviour is a result of biology or environment
    - but can be holistic if adopts the interactions it approach
  • Real life application ?
    Reduce crime