behaviour is a direct product of interactions within the body
different areas of biopsychology include genetics, brainstructure and neurochemistry
genetics
genetic information is passed on through the DNA in chromosomes, which are also passed down through generations from our parents (heredity)
biological psychologists believe there is a genetic basis for some behaviours, and therefore conduct twin studies to study the effects of genes on behaviour
identical twins (monozygotic twins) share 100% of their DNA, whereas non-identical twins (dizygotic twins) share around 50% of the same genes
if a study shows a higher concordancerate in MZ twins than DZ twins then we can assume a genetic basis for this behaviour
twin studies- examples
schizophrenia (Grottesman 1991)- 48%, 17%
bipolar depression (Craddock and Jones 1999)- 40%, 5-10%
OCD (Nestadt et al 2010)- 68%, 31%
genetics terms
genotype- a particular set of genes that a person possesses
phenotype- characteristics of an individual that are determined by both genes and environment
genome- an individuals entire set of genes
role of evolution
natural selection- characteristics which are adaptive and help survival are more likely to be passed on
sexual selection- attributes or behaviours which increase reproductive success are passed on and over-exaggerated over generations
brain structures
particular areas of the brain can be linked to different behaviours (localisation of function). This can be studied using braindamaged patients. If a particular function is lost after damage to a certain area of the brain, we can assume that this part of the brain was associated with that function.
Phineas Gage
pole cracked into his skull
frontal cortex was damage (controls personality)
became unfriendly, indecisive and aggressive
suggests that structures of the brain are responsible for behaviour
neurochemistry
biopsychologists suggest that our behaviour may be determined by our neurochemistry (neurotransmitters and hormones)
serotonin- linked to depression and aggression, low levels in OCD, high levels in shyness and fearfulness
dopamine- linked to pleasure and can form addiction, also linked to schizophrenia and hallucinations
melatonin- helps to synchronise the stages of sleep
testosterone- linked to aggression and male characteristics
biological approach- AO3
highly scientific
has real life application e.g drug therapies
hard to distinguish cause and effect
deterministic view of behaviour- rules out choice or free will
ignores environmental factors- had to separate nature and nurture
reductionist- ignores other suitable levels of explanation and the interaction of causal factor