Biological Schiz

    Cards (29)

    • Biological explanations
      Explanations for schizophrenia based on genetics and neural correlates
    • Genetic explanation
      Schizophrenia is inherited or caused by specific genes
    • Inheritance
      Schizophrenia runs in families, closer genetic relationship increases risk
    • Family studies
      Schizophrenia risk is higher in first-degree relatives
    • Twin studies
      Higher concordance rate in monozygotic twins compared to dizygotic twins
    • Adoption studies
      Children with schizophrenic biological mothers have higher risk
    • Specific genes
      Schizophrenia is polygenic and caused by multiple genes
    • PPP3CC gene
      Defective version of a gene associated with schizophrenia
    • Chromosome 5 gene

      Gene linked to schizophrenia in some families
    • Evaluation of genetic explanations
      Genes alone cannot fully explain schizophrenia, other factors involved
    • Nature vs. nurture
      Difficulty separating genetic and environmental influences
    • Mutation in parental DNA

      Mutation in paternal sperm cells increases risk of schizophrenia
    • Location of specific genes
      No definitive results, underlying mechanism unclear
    • Dopamine hypothesis

      Schizophrenia caused by excessive activity of dopamine
    • Dopamine
      Neurotransmitter responsible for transmitting signals between neurons
    • Dopamine receptors
      High density and sensitivity associated with schizophrenia
    • Positive symptoms

      Associated with high levels of dopamine in mesolimbic system
    • Negative symptoms
      Associated with high levels of dopamine in mesocortical system
    • Clozapine
      New drug effective against schizophrenia, affects dopamine and other neurotransmitters
    • Evaluation of dopamine hypothesis
      Simplistic, other neurotransmitters involved, practical applications
    • Dopamine abnormalities

      More dopamine receptors in schizophrenics, evidence of abnormalities
    • Neural correlates
      Schizophrenia caused by structural and functional brain abnormalities
    • Enlarged ventricles
      Fluid-filled gaps between brain areas associated with schizophrenia
    • Negative symptoms
      Enlarged ventricles associated with negative symptoms
    • Research methods
      Post-mortems and non-invasive scanning techniques used
    • Loss of brain tissue
      Enlarged ventricles suggest a loss of brain tissue in schizophrenia
    • Evaluation of neural correlates
      Enlarged ventricles only explain certain symptoms, inconclusive evidence
    • Effect vs. cause
      Enlarged ventricles may be a consequence rather than the cause of schizophrenia
    • Structural brain damage

      Brain damage evident at first onset, worsens over time
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