Biopsychology

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Or Everything you’ve ever wanted to know about sexual selection but were afraid to ask

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Biopsychology. Or Everything you’ve ever wanted to know about sexual selection but were afraid to ask. Interactions. Definitions of interactions: The whole is greater than the sum of its parts The relationship between the variables is multiplicative instead of additive - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Biopsychology

Page 1: Biopsychology

Or

Everything you’ve ever wanted to know about sexual selection but were afraid to

ask

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Definitions of interactions:

The whole is greater than the sum of its parts

The relationship between the variables is multiplicative instead of additive

The effectiveness of one intervention is contingent upon another intervention

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Yes

Yes

No

No

0

5

3

-20

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Yes

Yes

No

No

0

5

10

100

Valium

Alcohol

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Ya Ya Sisterhood

Female

Scorpion King

Male

10

-10

-10

10

Gender

Movie

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Survival of the fittest

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Finding/Harvesting Resources

Avoiding Predators

Avoiding Illness

REPRODUCING!!!

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If other organs such as the stomach and spleen were evolutionarily advantageous, why not the brain?

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Mate Selection

Men – Looking to “spread their seed”

Women – Looking for a mate who will care for children

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Post Hoc Theorizing Game

He who hesitates is lost

Look before you leap

Birds of a feather flock together

Opposites attract

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Nature NurtureVs.

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Identical Twins100%

Fraternal Twins50%

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Adopted Child

Adopted Family

Genetic Family

Shared environment

Shared Genetics

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Heritability Estimates – The proportion of the total variance in a trait that is attributable to genetic variation within a group.

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Heritability Estimates

Intelligence: .70Neuroticism: .55Depression: .44Doing Crosswords: .55Liking Sweets: .65Playing Chess: .62

Assertiveness: .72Smoking: .48Ambition: .54Humility: .42Leadership: .59Time Reading: .43

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However, it is generally accepted that behavior is determined by a nature x nurture interaction

e.g. A person with a genetic predisposition towards alcoholism won’t become an alcoholic if he never takes a sip of liquor

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Heart RateBlood Pressure

Skin ConductanceElectromyography

Cortisol LevelsBreathing RatesTone of Voice

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Polygraphs

Liars feel:

1) Nervous that they’ll get caught

2) Guilty about lying

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Polygraphs

How it works:

1) Tell the truth, get a baseline measure

2) Tell a lie, get a measure of deception

3) Compute the difference between the two

4) Ask real questions, if subject looks more like a liar than a truth-teller, then the subject is lying

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Polygraphs

Problems:1) Questions may be anxiety provoking2) Knowing that if the machine says that

you’re lying you’ll go to jail causes anxiety

3) Not all liars exhibit psychophysiological responses.

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How to trick a polygraph:

Time

Arou sal

Difference

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How to trick a polygraph:

Time

Arou sal Difference

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How polygraphs REALLY work

Criminals get scared by the prospect of being detected, and they confess their crimes!

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Other areas that psychophys can study

EmotionAttitudes

Unconscious Processes

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The Sleep-Wake CycleFree of all time cues, the human day

averages about 25 hoursBody temperature, and hormone levels

follow this cycleRegulated by the hormone melatoninSince we have a ~24 hour cycle, the longer

we stay awake, the less we sleep!

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Giant Sloth: 20 hoursBrown Bat: 19 hoursHouse Cat: 14 hoursJaguar: 10 hoursHuman: 8 hoursElephant: 3 hoursHorse: 2 hours

Average Hours Sleeping per Day

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The Randy Gardner CaseMood Disturbance commonComplex Cognitive tasks unaffectedDull cognitive tasks are difficultLongitudinal partial sleep deprivation

causes more difficulty than short term total sleep deprivation

Microsleeps

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Experimental rats die after several days. Yoked Rats not affected.

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Increasing sleep efficiency after deprivation

Da Vinci’s sleep strategy15 minute nap every 4 hours

Total of 1.5 hours of sleep per dayReplicated by Stampi, (1992) in a lab.

Takes 2 weeks to adjust, during which time...

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1) Evolution may have impacted our behavior, but be wary of post-hoc analysis

2) The nature vs. nurture debate should be viewed as an interaction

3) Psychophysiology can tell us a great deal, but polygraphs are useless.

4) Sleep is good.

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Example for class:

Spanking Children

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