Explain how genes, chromosomes, DNA, and genomes all relate to one another.
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Psychology Twelfth Edition
Chapter 3 Genes, Evolution,
and Environment
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Unlocking the Secrets of Genes
• LO 3.1.A Explain how genes, chromosomes, DNA,
and genomes all relate to one another.
• LO 3.1.B Explain why the study of epigenetics
offers an important avenue for understanding the
genetic components of thought and behavior.
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The Human Genome (1 of 8)
• In general, behavioral geneticists study our
differences, such as those originating in heredity.
• Researchers attempt to tease apart the relative
contributions of:
– heredity
– environment
• They adopt a nature and nurture approach in their
investigations.
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The Human Genome (2 of 8)
• Genes, the basic units of heredity, are located on
chromosomes, which consist of strands of DNA.
• Each sperm cell and each egg cell (ovum)
contains 23 chromosomes.
• At conception, the fertilized egg and all the body
cells that eventually develop from it (except for
sperm cells and ova) contain:
– 46 chromosomes
– arranged in 23 pairs
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The Human Genome (3 of 8)
• Our genes, together with noncoding DNA, make
up the human genome.
– Many genes contribute directly to a particular trait.
– Others work indirectly by switching other genes on or
off.
– Many genes are inherited in the same form by
everyone.
– Others vary, contributing to our individuality.
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The Human Genome (4 of 8)
• Most human traits depend on more than one gene
pair.
• This makes tracking down the genetic
contributions to a trait extremely difficult.
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The Human Genome (5 of 8)
• However, advances in technology now permit
scientists to carry out:
– genome-wide association studies
examining variations in many DNA elements at once
– whole-genome sequencing
examines the entire 3 billion base pairs of DNA
• The researchers start by looking for DNA
differences called genetic markers.
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The Human Genome (6 of 8)
• Locating a gene does not automatically tell us:
– what it does
– how it does it
– how multiple genes interact and influence behavior
• Usually, locating a gene is just the first small step
in understanding exactly what it does and how it
works.
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The Human Genome (7 of 8)
Figure 3.1
Genes and Chromosomes
Science Source
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The Human Genome (8 of 8)
Figure 3.2
DNA Double Helix
Africa Studio/Fotolia
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Epigenetics (1 of 2)
• Many people think of the genome as a static
blueprint, a set of coded messages that never
changes over a person’s lifetime.
• But this is a big misconception.
• The genome changes over time because of:
– mutations that arise before or after birth
– epigenetic changes that affect the expression (activity)
of specific genes without altering the sequence of
bases in those genes
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Epigenetics (2 of 2)
• Mutations and epigenetic changes can be affected
by environmental factors.
– Example: Epigenetic changes may help explain why
one identical twin might get a disease and the other not
get it.
• Epigenetic changes affect:
– behavior
– learning and memory
– vulnerability to mental disorders
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The Genetics of Similarity
• LO 3.2.A Explain how natural selection contributes
to changes in gene frequencies in a population.
• LO 3.2.B List and describe five innate human
characteristics.
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Evolution and Natural Selection (1 of 3)
• Evolutionary psychologists study our
commonalities:
– personality
– emotion
– sexual behavior
– reasoning
• They trace these to the processes of evolution,
especially the process of natural selection.
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Evolution and Natural Selection (2 of 3)
• They draw inferences about the behavioral
tendencies that might have been selected.
• These tendencies:
– helped our forebears solve survival problems
– enhanced reproductive fitness
• They then conduct research to see if such
tendencies actually exist throughout the world.
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Evolution and Natural Selection (3 of 3)
• Many evolutionary psychologists believe that the
mind is not a general-purpose computer.
• It is viewed as a collection of specialized mental
modules to handle specific survival problems.
– a module does not have to correspond to one specific
brain area
• Critics are concerned that the notion of mental
modules might lead to misguided assumptions.
– namely, that virtually every human activity and capacity
is innate
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Innate Human Characteristics (1 of 2)
• Because of the way our species evolved, many
abilities, tendencies, and characteristics are:
– either present at birth in all human beings, or
– develop rapidly as a child matures
• Examples of traits:
– inborn reflexes
– an attraction to novelty
– a motive to explore and manipulate objects
– an impulse to play
– the capacity for certain basic cognitive skills
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Innate Human Characteristics (2 of 2)
• There are adaptive and evolutionary aspects of:
– sensory and perceptual abilities
– learning
– ethnocentrism
– cognitive biases
– memory
– emotions and emotional expressions
– stress reactions
– the tendency to gain weight when food is plentiful
– attachment to others
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Our Human Heritage: Courtship and
Mating
• LO 3.3.A Compare the sexual strategies of
females and males, according to the
sociobiological perspective.
• LO 3.3.B Discuss four challenges to the
evolutionary view of human mating strategies.
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Evolution and Sexual Strategies (1 of 3)
• Sociobiologists and evolutionary psychologists
argue that males and females have evolved
different sexual and courtship strategies.
• These have evolved in response to survival
problems faced in the distant past.
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Evolution and Sexual Strategies (2 of 3)
• In this view, it has been adaptive for:
– males to be promiscuous, to be attracted to young
partners, and to want sexual novelty
– females to be monogamous, to be choosy about
partners, and to prefer security to novelty
• Evolutionary psychologists research
commonalities in human mating and dating
practices around the world.
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Evolution and Sexual Strategies (3 of 3)
Figure 3.3
Preferred Age in a Mate
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The “Genetic Leash” (1 of 3)
• Critics argue that evolutionary explanations of
infidelity and monogamy:
– are based on simplistic stereotypes of gender
differences
– that they rely too heavily on answers to questionnaires,
which often do not reflect real-life choices
– that convenience samples used in questionnaire
studies are not necessarily representative of people in
general
– that the evolutionary emphasis on the Pleistocene Age
may not be warranted
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The “Genetic Leash” (2 of 3)
• Moreover, our ancestors probably did not have a
wide range of partners to choose from.
• Evidence suggests that what may have evolved is
mate selection based on:
– similarity
– proximity
• The central issue dividing evolutionary theorists
and their critics is the length of the “genetic leash.”
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The “Genetic Leash” (3 of 3)
Figure 3.4
Attitudes toward Chastity
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The Genetics of Difference
• LO 3.4.A Explain what heritability refers to, and
discuss three important facts about heritability that
should be kept in mind when discussing genetic
contributions to behavior.
• LO 3.4.B Outline the basic design of a heritability
study that involves twins and adoptees.
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The Meaning of Heritability (1 of 2)
• Heritability refers to the extent to which differences
in a trait or ability within a group of individuals are
accounted for by genetic differences.
• Heritability estimates do not apply to specific
individuals or to differences between groups.
• They apply only to differences within a particular
group living in a particular environment.
– Example: Heritability is higher for children in affluent
families than in impoverished ones.
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The Meaning of Heritability (2 of 2)
• Even highly heritable traits can often be modified
by the environment.
• Behavioral geneticists have found many examples
of how genes interact with the environment.
– Although height is highly heritable, malnourished
children may not grow to be as tall as they would with
sufficient food.
– Children who eat an extremely nutritious diet may grow
to be taller than anyone thought they could.
– The same principle applies to psychological traits and
skills.
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Computing Heritability (1 of 3)
• Behavioral geneticists often study differences
among individuals by using data from studies of:
– adopted children
– identical and fraternal twins
• By comparing the genetic and environmental
“overlap,” researchers can estimate the heritability
of a trait.
– Example: If identical twins are more alike than fraternal
twins, then the increased similarity must be due to
genetic influences.
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Computing Heritability (2 of 3)
Figure 3.5
Heritability and Adoption
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Computing Heritability (3 of 3)